JUDGEMENT
GAJENDRAGADKAR, J. -
(1.) THESE appeals have been brought to this Court by special leave by the appellant, the Eastern Bank, Ltd., in which the appellant seeks to
challenge the correctness of the order passed by the Central Government
Labour Court purporting to exercise its jurisdiction under S.33C(2) of
the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 (14 of 1947). The eight respondents had
claimed a special allowance under Para. 164(b)(1) of the Sastri award on
the ground that besides attending to their routine duties as clerks, they
had been operating the adding-machine from time to time, and so, were
entitled to the said special allowance. The appellant raised certain
preliminary objections and resisted the claims made by the respondents on
the merits. The preliminary objections need not be considered in these
appeals, because in Civil Appeals Nos. 823-826 of 1962 we have
elaborately dealt with them and have rejected them. That leaves the
merits to be considered in the present appeals.
(2.) IT is common ground that the respondents do their routine work of clerks and in the course of discharging their duties in that behalf, they
operate the adding-machine for the purpose of making additions
mechanically. The appellant contended before the labour court that
adding-machine operators could not be regarded as comptists. The labour
court, however, took the view that since adding-machine operators and
addressographers had been shown by the Imperial Bank of India as the
equivalents of comptists in the statement field by the said bank before
the Labour Appellate Tribunal, the appellant was not entitled to contend
that a bank employee who operates an adding-machine is not a comptists.
It is on this ground that the respondents' claim has been allowed. We
have already held that this ground is unsound and the conclusion based on
it cannot be affirmed.In the present appeals, however, evidence has been
led by the parties and so, it is not necessary to remand the cases to the
labour court. We, therefore, propose to deal with the merits of the claim
made by the respondents in the light of the evidence led before the
labour court. Mr. Bettlesale, the staff officer of the appellant, made an
affidavit that the respondents had not worked for more than four hours in
a month on the adding-machine, and he added that the said work could be
completed either on one day or may be spread over up to four days. In
fact, according to him, the adding-machines are provided in order to aid
the respondents in their work and the operation of the said machine does
not call for any additional skill or higher responsibility. In this
cross-examination, the witness stated that the adding-machines at the
commencement were utilized at the request of the employees. He admitted
that the appellant paid special allowance for work on accounting
machines, because the said work requires special skill and efficiency,
but since operating the adding-machine and that too for a very short
time, involves no special skill or efficiency, the respondents could not
be treated as comptists.
On behalf of the respondents Mr. Naik gave evidence. He referred to his duties as a routine clerk and he added that he was directed to use the
adding-machine for the purposes of balancing by his officer-in-charge.
(3.) ACCORDING to him, his work on the adding-machine would average out to not less than seven days in a month, though he admitted that it was not
possible to accurately establish the extent of the work done by the
respective clerks on the adding-machine. Mr. Savoor who also gave
evidence for the respondents stated that there are about eight persons in
the current account dependent who used the adding-machine from time to
time. Besides, the eight respondents also claimed to use the said machine
and there are only two adding machines in the office. Thus, it would be
seen that each one of the respondents who claimed the special allowance
is shown to be operating the adding machine for four hours in a month and
that to as an item of work incidental to the discharge of his main duties
as a routine clerk. It would indeed be strange if the eight respondents
as well as the eight clerks in the accounting department could claim
special allowance on the ground that they operate the two adding-machines
in the office by turn; that obviously was not intended by the Sastri
award when it prescribed the special allowance to comptists in Para.
164(b)(1). Therefore, on the evidence as it stands, we have no difficulty in holding that the respondents are not comptists under Para. 164(b)(1)
of the Sastri award. They are not described as such, and the nature of
the work, the responsibility attending to the work and the skill required
of them for discharging the said work do not justify their claim to be
comptists for the purpose of special allowance.The result is, the appeals
are allowed, the orders passed by the labour court are reversed and the
respondents' claim made under S.33C(2) of the Industrial Disputes Act,
1947, are dismissed. We make no order as to costs.;
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