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[Cites 9, Cited by 32]

Supreme Court of India

Andhra University Etc vs Regional Provident Fund Commissioner ... on 8 October, 1985

Equivalent citations: 1986 AIR 463, 1985 SCR SUPL. (3) 582, AIR 1986 SUPREME COURT 463, 1986 LAB. I. C. 103, 1986 UJ (SC) 31, (1986) 1 APLJ 23.2, (1986) IJR 38 (SC), 1986 SCC (L&S) 134, (1985) 2 CURLR 334, (1986) 68 FJR 6, (1985) 51 FACLR 605, (1986) 1 LABLJ 155, (1986) 1 LAB LN 64, 1985 (4) SCC 509, (1986) 1 CURCC 599, (1986) 1 SUPREME 97

Author: V. Balakrishna Eradi

Bench: V. Balakrishna Eradi, O. Chinnappa Reddy, V. Khalid

           PETITIONER:
ANDHRA UNIVERSITY ETC.

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
REGIONAL PROVIDENT FUND COMMISSIONER OF ANDHRA PRAfESH AND A

DATE OF JUDGMENT08/10/1985

BENCH:
ERADI, V. BALAKRISHNA (J)
BENCH:
ERADI, V. BALAKRISHNA (J)
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
KHALID, V. (J)

CITATION:
 1986 AIR  463		  1985 SCR  Supl. (3) 582
 1985 SCC  (4) 509	  1985 SCALE  (2)752


ACT:
     Employes' Provident  Funds and Miscellaneous Provisions
Act, sections  1(3)(a), 2(1-C),	 2(g) and  2(a), scope	of -
Whether	 the   establishments  namely,	the  Departments  of
Publications  and   Press  of	the   Andhra   and   Osmania
Universities are "factories" and their activities fall under
"manufacture"  and   therefore	they  are  governed  by	 the
provisions of  the said	 Act -	Interpretation of  the	word
"establishment" in section 2-A.



HEADNOTE:
     The  Employees'   Provident  Funds	  and  Miscellaneous
Provisions Act	applies to  every establishment	 which is  a
"factory" engaged  in and "industry" specified in Schedule I
and  in	  which	 20   or  more	persons	 are  employed.	 The
expressions  "manufacture"  and	 "factory"  are	 defined  in
section 2(1-C)	and 2(g)  of  the  Act.	 The  establishments
namely, the Departments of Publications and Press of the two
Universities  each   employing	100  persons,  run  printing
presses, where	the work of printing of text books, journals
and magazines  for the	various constituent  and  affiliated
colleges as  well as  of various items of stationery such as
admission forms to colleges, hostels and examinations, forms
of memo	 of parks,  hall' tickets, answer books, syllabi for
various colleges  and departments,  registers, receipt books
for colleges  and hostels  and letter heads for Universities
carried out. The Regional Provident Fund Commissioner called
upon the  two Universities  to submit  their monthly returns
and remit  the amounts	of contribution	 as required  by the
provisions  of	the  scheme  covered  under  the  Employees'
Provident Funds	 and Miscellaneous  Provisions Act. Two writ
petitions were therefore, filed by the appellants separately
challenging the	 legality and validity of the notices issued
to  them   by  the  Regional  Provident	 Fund  Commissioner,
contending (i)	that the Universities are purely educational
institutions having a Dumber of departments, the main object
of which  is to impart education to the youth of the country
in  various   branches	of   Students,	and  therefore,	 the
Department of  Publications and Press which is intended only
to cater the needs and requirement of the students cannot be
regarded  either   as  a   "factory"  or  as  an  "industry"
attracting the	provisions of the Act; ant (11) that the two
Universities had their own provident
583
fund schemes  for their	 employees and	therefore, there was
justification for  subjecting them  to the provisions of the
Act. A	learned Single Judge of the High Court accepting the
said conventions  allowed the  writ petitions.	However,  on
appeals filed  by the  Regional Provident Fund Commissioner,
Andhra Pradesh, the Division Bench by two separate judgments
set aside the judgments of the learned Single Judge and held
that the Department of Publications and Press of each of the
two Universities  is an	 "establishment" which	is a factory
engaged in  an industry	 specified in  Schedule I,  in which
more than  20 persons were employed and hence the provisions
of the	Act ant	 the Scheme  were applicable  in respect  of
these Departments. Hence the appeals by special leave.
     Dismissing the appeals, the Court,
^
     HELD :  1.1 To attract the provisions of the Employees'
Provident Funds	 and Miscellaneous Provisions Act, two tests
namely,	 whether  there	 is  an	 establishment	which  is  a
"factory" engaged  in any  of the  scheduled industries	 and
whether	 20  or	 more  persons	are  employed  in  the	said
establishment must be fulfilled. [587 F]
     1.2 Printing  is one  of the  industries  specified  in
Schedule I of the Act ant it is admitted that much more than
20 persons  are employed  in the  concerned establishment of
the two Universities [588 A]
     1.3 The  Departments  of  Publications  ant  Press	 are
"factories" as	defined in  clause (g)	of section  2 of the
Act. Under the	definition, "factory" means any premises, in
any part  of which  a manufacturing process is being carried
on. The	 Printing of  text books, journals, registers, forms
ant  various   items  of   stationery	clearly	  constitute
"manufacture" within  the meaning  of the said expression as
defined in  clause (1-C)  of section 2 of the Act. [587 G-H;
588 A]
     1.4 It  is therefore clear that all the requirements of
clause	 3(a) of  section (l) of the Act are fully satisfied
in the cases and hence the decision of the Division Bench of
the High  Court upholding the validity of the notices issued
by the	respondent, Regional provident Fund Commissioner, is
perfectly correct ant justified. [588 A-B]
     Visva Bharati  v. Regional Provident fund Commissioner,
West Bengal, [1983] 1 L.L.J. 332 overruled.
     2.1 In  construing the  provisions	 of  the  Employees'
Provident funds ant Miscellaneous Provisions Act, it must be
584
borne in  mint that  it is  a  beneficent  piece  of  Social
Welfare legislation aimed at promoting and securing the well
being of the employees ant the Court will not adopt a narrow
interpretation which  will have	 the effect of defeating the
very object ant purpose of the Act. [587 A-B]
     2.2 Section  2-A of the Act was inserted merely for the
purposes of  clarifying the position that the Act applies to
composite factories. It is not the intentment of the section
to  lay	  down	even   by  remotest   implication  that	  an
establishment, which  is a   factory  engaged in an industry
specified in  Schedule I  will not liable for coverage under
the Act	 merely because	 it is part of a larger organisation
carrying on  some Of  the activties  also which may not fall
within the scope of the Act. [586 G-H; 587 A]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 126 of 1973.

From the Judgment and Order dated 21.12.70 of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Writ Appeal No. 396 of 1971.

AND Civil Appeal No. 204 of 1973.

From the Judgment and Order dated 25.2.1972 of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Writ Appeal No. 392 of 1971.

B.R.L. Iyengar, G.N. Rao, T.C. Gupta and Attar Singh for the Appellant.

M.S. Gujral, C.V. Subba Rao, R.N. Poddar and T.C. Sharma for the Respondents.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by BALAKRISHNA ERADI, J. These two appeals are directed against two judgments of the Andhra Pradesh High Court dismissing two Writ Petitions filed by the appellants herein namely, the Andhra University ant the Osmania University challenging the legality and validity of the notices issued to the two Universities by the Regional Provident Fund Commissioner of Andhra Pradesh intimating them that the Departments of Publications and Press wherein printing presses were being run by the two Universities, were liable for coverage under the Employees' Provident 585 Funds and Miscellaneous Provisions Act (hereinafter called the 'Act and Scheme') and calling upon the two Universities to submit their monthly returns and remit the amounts of contribution as required by the provisions of the Scheme. me appeals have been filed on the basis of certificates of fitness granted by the High Court under Article 133 (l)(c) of the Constitution.

The common contention taken by the appellants herein in the two Writ Petitions was that the Universities are purely educational institutions having a number of departments, the main object of which is to impart education to the youth of the country in various branches of studies, that the Department of Publications and Press which is intended only to cater the needs and requirements of the students cannot be regarded either as a 'factory' or as an 'industry' and the provisions of the Act are not therefore, attracted in respect of the said department. It was also submitted in the Writ Petitions that the two Universities had their own provident fund schemes for their employees and hence there was no justification for subjecting them to the provisions of the Act. A learned Single Judge of the High Court accepted the contention of the two Universities that the Department of Publications and Press could not be regarded as an 'industry' and accordingly held that the provisions of the Act were not attracted. However, on appeals filed by the Regional Provident Fund Commissioner, Andhra Pradesh before a Division Bench of the High Court, the Division Bench by two separate judgments set aside the judgments of the learned Single Judge and held that the Department of Publications and Press of each of the two Universities is an establishment' which is a factory engaged in an industry specified in Schedule I, in which more than 20 persons were employed and hence the provisions of the Act and the Scheme were applicable in respect of these Departments. In these appeals, the appellants namely, the two Universities, have challenged the correctness of the aforesaid conclusion recorded by the Division Bench of the High Court.

It is common ground that the Department of Publications and Press of the two Universities (appellants) runs printing presses, where the work of printing of text books, journals and magazines for the various constituent and affiliated colleges as well as of various items of stationery such as admission forms to colleges, hostels and examinations, forms of memo of marks, hall tickets, answer books, syllabi for various colleges and departments, registers, receipt books for colleges and hostels and letter heads for Universities is carried out. About 100 persons are employed in connection with the said activity in the Department of Publications and Press of each University.

586

Section 1(3)(a) of the Act lays down that subject to the provisions contained in Section 16 (those provisions are admittedly not applicable to the cases before us), the Act applies to every establishment which is a 'factory' engaged in any 'industry' specified in Schedule I and in which 20 or more persons are employed. The expression "factory" has been defined in Section 2(g) as meaning "any premises, including the precincts thereof, in any part of which a manufacturing process is being carried on or is ordinarily so carried on, whether with the aid of power or without the aid of power."

Section 2(1-c) defines "manufacture" or 'manufacturing process' as meaning 'any process for making, altering, repairing, ornamenting, finishing, packing, oiling, washing, cleaning, breaking up, demolishing or otherwise treating or adapting any article or substance with a view to its use, sale, transport, delivery or disposal."

It was not disputed before the High Court that the Department of Publications and Press of the two Universities were 'establishments' and the only contention urged was that the said Departments were not 'factories' and the activity carried on therein did not constitute an 'industry'. However, before this Court a new point was urged on behalf of the appellants that for the purposes of determining the applicability of the Act the entire University must be treated as an establishment and if the University cannot be said to be a factory engaged in an industry, there cannot be any question of coverage under the Act and the Scheme. For sustaining this contention support was sought to be derived from Section 2-A of the Act, which is in the following terms :-

"2-A Establishment to include all departments and branches -
For the removal of doubts, it is hereby declared that where an establishment consists of different departments or has branches, whether situate in the same place or in different places, all such departments or branches shall be treated as part of the same establishment."

We are unable to see how this provision is of any assistance to the appellants. Section 2-A was inserted in the Act merely for the purposes of clarifying the position that the Act applies to composite factories. It is not intentment of the section to lay 587 down even by remotest implication that an establishment, which is a factory engaged in an industry specified in Schedule I will not be liable for coverage under the Act merely because it is part of a larger organisation carrying on some other activities also which may not fall within the scope of the Act. In construing the provisions of the Act, we have to bear in mind that it is a beneficient piece of Social Welfare legislation aimed at promoting and securing the well being of the employees and the Court will not adopt a narrow interpretation which will have the effect of defeating the very object and purpose of the Act. Once it is found that there is an establishment which is a 'factory' engaged in an 'industry' specified in Schedule I and employing 20 or more persons, the provisions of the Act will get attracted to the case and it makes no difference to this legal position that the establishment is run by a larger organisation which may be carrying on other additional activities falling outside the Act.

Our attention was drawn to a decision of a learned Single Judge of the Calcutta High Court in Visva Bharati v. Regional Provident Fund Commissioner, West Bengal, [1983] 1 L.L.J. 332 wherein it was held that the provisions of the Act were inapplicable in respect of a "Silpa Sadan", Agricultural Farm and a Hospital run by the Visva-Bharati University. The learned Judge was of the view that "if the University as an establishment does not come under the provisions and or the purview of the Act, the different branches or departments of the University which the University empowered and or entitled to maintain under the provision of the Visva Bharati Act cannot be brought within the mischief of the Act." We have no hesitation to hold that the aforesaid view expressed by the learned Judge is not correct or sound and that the said decision does not lay down correct law.

As already indicated, the true tests to be applied is whether there is an establishment which is a 'factory' engaged tn any of the scheduled industries and whether 20 or more persons are employed in the said establishment. If the answer is in the affirmative, the provisions of the Act are clearly attracted.

In the cases before us there cannot be any doubt that the establishments namely, the Departments of Publications and Press are 'factories' as defined in clause (g) of Section 2 of the Act. Under the said definition factory means any premises in any part of which any manufacturing process is being carried on. me printing of text books, journals, registers, forms and various items of stationery clearly constitute 'manufacture' within the 588 meaning of the said expression as defined in clause (1-c) of Section 2 of the Act. That printing is one of the industries specified in the Schedule is not in dispute. It is also not disputed that much more than 20 persons are employed in the concerned establishments of the two Universities. Thus all the requirements of clause (3) (a) of Section 1 of the Act are fully satisfied in these cases and hence the conclusion recorded by the High Court that the establishments in question are liable for coverage under the Act is perfectly correct and justified.

It follows that these appeals are totally devoid of merits. They will accordingly stand dismissed with costs.

S.R.					  Appeals dismissed.
589