JUDGEMENT
DAS GUPTA, J. -
(1.) THIS appeal by special leave is from an award of the Industrial Tribunal, Delhi, in a dispute between the appellants, Delhi Cloth and General Mills
Company, and its workmen. Of the several matters that were referred to
this tribunal for adjudication we are concerned in this appeal with only
four in which the award is in favour of the workmen. These four were in
these terms :
"(1) Whether the existing practice of making deductions from the piece-rated earnings in case of a weaver attending to a pair of Turkish looms or to a pair of looms of Turkish towel and plaint sort each in B mill weaving should be given up or modified ? What other directions are necessary in this respect ? (2) Whether power plant operatives on running duty are entitled to any extra remuneration for having to forego half-hour rest interval admissible to other operatives in the mills ? If so, what should be the quantum of such remuneration ? (3) Whether operatives designated as 'doffer helpers' attached to the 'doubling frame tenters' should be redesignated as helpers having regard to the nature of their duties, and whether the time-rated wages of Rs. 30 per month applicable to this category require to be raised ? If so, to what extent and from which date ? (4) Whether the Bombay scheme of standardized wage-rates in case of creelers working on plain and high-speed warping machines has not been implemented ? If so, to what relief are the operatives concerned entitled and from which date ?"
(2.) THE appellant is a public limited company having amongst its various industrial undertakings a group of textile mills known as Delhi Cloth
Mills, A, B and C. The first of these disputes is concerned only with the
B mill. Prior to 1930 only plain cloth was manufactured in this mill. Two
plain looms were the normal assignment of each weaver for making such
cloth. In 1930 the appellants began to manufacture Turkish towel also in
the B mill on some of the plain looms by equipping these looms with the
necessary equipment for such manufacture. The normal assignment of each
weaver in making Turkish towel was however one such loom. The piece-rates
for Turkish towel looms were fixed at a higher figure than those for
ordinary looms. No dispute arose about the wages of these weavers up to
the year 1956. In that year the management started allotting two Turkish
towel looms to some weavers and to some one Turkish towel loom and one
plain loom. When this was started, the management stopped paying the
workmen in full according to the old piece-rates but started making
certain deductions. Twelve and a half percent of the piece-rate earnings
was deducted in the case of weavers attending to two Turkish towel looms
and one ordinary in the case of weavers attending on one Turkish Towel
loom and one ordinary loom. The appellant's case is that they were
entitled to make these deductions under the Bombay scheme of standardized
wage-rates which had been accepted by an agreement between the appellants
and their workmen in February 1949 with regard to standardization of
wages in all occupations. The scheme, it has to be mentioned, proceeds on
the basis that two looms are the normal assignment of one weaver, but
provides that when three or four or six looms were assigned to any
weaver, the piece-rates should be reduced; the reduction would be
one-sixth when the assignment was of three looms; one-fourth when the
assignment was of four looms and one-third when the assignment was of six
looms. No provision in terms was made in this scheme for Turkish Towel
looms. The appellant's case, however, is that as the normal assignment
for Turkish Towel looms in one loom per weaver the Bombay scheme is in
terms applicable to weavers working on Turkish Towel loom on the equation
that one Turkish Towel loom is equal to two ordinary looms. On that
basis, the appellants argue, a weaver working on two Turkish Towel looms
should be deemed to be working on four ordinary looms for the application
of the scheme and his rates are liable to deduction by one-fourth, i.e.,
25 percent instead of 12 percent reduction which the management has in fact applied. On the same assumption, the appellant's case proceeds that
the weaver on one Turkish Towel loom and one ordinary loom should be
deemed to be working on three ordinary looms and that his rates are
accordingly liable to a reduction by one-sixth instead of the one-tenth
they have applied.The tribunal held that there is no justification for
the application of Bombay scheme to Turkish Towel looms and accordingly
held that the existing practice of making deductions in case of a weaver
attending on Turkish Towel looms is unjust and unwarranted and that the
management should pay back to all weavers from whose earnings such
deductions have been made with effect from the date of reference.
The main attempt of Mr. Sastri in challenging the correctness of this decision was to convince us that the Bombay scheme applies to Turkish
Towel looms on the basis of one Turkish Towel loom being equated to two
ordinary looms. He could however point out nothing in the words of the
Bombay scheme which even remotely justifies such a conclusion. If one
were to think that the Bombay scheme applied to all looms, including
Turkish Towel looms, the proper conclusion would be that the reductions
in the piece-rates provided in Para. 7 of the scheme would come into
operation only when three or more Turkish Towel looms were being assigned
to a single weaver. As yet there has been no assignment of three or more
Turkish Towel looms to any single weaver, and it is unnecessary to
consider such a hypothetical position. It seems to us however that as the
Bombay scheme proceeds on the basis that the two looms are the normal
assignment of one weaver, it can have no application to such looms of
which the normal assignment is different. We can see no justification for
introducing into the scheme a deeming provision that a person working on
one Turkish Towel loom should be deemed to be working on two ordinary
looms or that a person working on one Turkish Towel loom and one ordinary
loom should be deemed to be working on three ordinary looms or that a
person working on two Turkish Towel looms should be deemed to be working
on four ordinary looms. There is no scope in law or commonsense for the
introduction of such a deeming provision into the Bombay scheme.Mr.
Sastri then contended that even if the Bombay scheme is not directly
applicable, the principle underlying the same should be applied. That
principle, according to Mr. Sastri, is that when due to improvements in
machinery and rationalization introduced by the management in the process
of manufacture it becomes possible for workmen to attend more looms than
was formerly possible for workmen to attend more looms than was formerly
possible, the piece-rates may reasonably be reduced. Evidence was adduced
on behalf of the management to show that the introduction of Barb Coleman
machines, new sizing machines and Supercot bobbins in 1955-56 made it
possible for workmen to look after two Turkish Towel looms while formerly
they could look after only one. The management's witness, however, admits
that the introduction of these improvements has increased the efficiency
of not only the Turkish Towel looms but also of plain looms. It is not
however the management's case that the piece-rates for the weavers of the
ordinary looms have been reduced because of the introduction of such
improvements. It is not possible for us, therefore, to accept Mr.
Sastri's contention that the piece-rates for Turkish Towel looms are
liable to deduction because improvements have been introduced by the
management. Incidentally, we may point out that if as a result of
improvements made in the machinery the workmen are able to attend to more
looms and then produce a larger number of towels, that can hardly justify
any deduction in their wages when the wages are fixed on a piece-rate
basis. It is the very essence of piece-rate wages that the more the
production by the workman, the proportionately larger would be his wages,
subject to such conditions as may be prescribed in that behalf.It is
faintly argued by Mr. Sastri on the basis of a recommendation in Para. 1
of the Wage Board which has been accepted by the Government that for a
period of five years from 1 January, 1960 no scheme for further revision
of minimum wages should be made by either the management or the workmen.
Mr. Sastri was constrained to concede, however, that this recommendation
cannot in any way affect the present award made in a reference made on 24
November, 1955. We find no justification, therefore, for interfering with
the tribunal's award on this question of deduction from the piece-rated
earnings for weavers working on Turkish Towel looms.
(3.) NOR can we find anything that would justify us in interfering with the tribunal's finding on the third matter set out above that there is no
justification for paying doffer helpers only Rs. 30, that the categories
known as doffer helpers in the doubling department are really helpers to
machinemen, that they are not helpers to doffers, that they do the same
type of duties as helpers to spinners in the ringframe department and
that this category of doffer helpers should be paid Rs. 41-6-0 per month.
Mr. Sastri contended that in fact these persons were appointed as helpers
to doffers and if they did some other work in some other department, that
was only to acquire experience for themselves with a view to ultimate
promotion and not with the knowledge or consent of the management. This
case that the persons named as doffer helpers might be doing some other
work without the knowledge or consent of the management was not pleaded
in the management's written statement. On a consideration of the evidence
the tribunal has come to a definite finding that in fact the doffers do
not need any helpers and the work which is actually done by these persons
designated as doffer helpers (sic) are really working as helpers to
machinemen in the doubling department. There is nothing to justify us in
interfering with the findings based on evidence given before the
tribunal.It is difficult to see, however, how in the other two matters
the tribunal made an award in favour of the workmen. The claim for extra
remuneration for having to forego half-hour's rest intervals appears to
be in substance a claim for the overtime payment. The tribunal has made a
rather startling statement that these workmen are working continuously
for 8 1/2 hours in a day. As there are only 24 hours in the day and night
and there are three shifts working, it is obvious that none of the shifts
work for more than 8 hours. The management's case is that the wages of
these workmen are fixed having due regard to this fact that in view of
the nature of their work they would be working for 8 hours at a stretch
without the half-hour's rest interval admissible to other workmen. This
appears to us to be extremely likely, and no evidence has been given on
the side of the workmen to show that the wages were fixed on the basis
that these workmen would have this half-hour's rest interval.;