SUPERINTENDENT AND REMEMBRANCER OF LEGAL AFFAIRS Vs. JAYDEB PAUL
LAWS(CAL)-1976-1-33
HIGH COURT OF CALCUTTA
Decided on January 14,1976

SUPERINTENDENT AND REMEMBRANCER OF LEGAL AFFAIRS Appellant
VERSUS
Jaydeb Paul Respondents

JUDGEMENT

A.N. Banerjee, J. - (1.) This appeal is directed against an order of acquittal under Sec. 245(1) of the Code of Criminal Procedure. It appears that the Respondent Jaidev Pal and two others were tried by the learned Magistrate in respect of an offence under Sec. 21(1) of the West Bengal Shops and Establishments Act, 1963, for having failed to get the shop registered under the Act.
(2.) The prosecution case in brief was that the accused persons have their oil shop at 113A Raja Dinendra Street, Calcutta, under the name of Jaidev Oil Mill. On December 22, 1970, an Inspector of Shops and Establishments visited the shop but the accused failed to produce registration certificate and other documents.
(3.) The defence was that the premises were used for manufacturing oil and that the Jaidev Oil Mill was registered as a factory under the Factories Act and that all the employees were governed under that Act. The learned Magistrate found that the provision of the Shops and Establishments Act, 1963, did not apply to the clerical establishment of the factory which was already governed by the Factories Act, 1948. Accordingly, he acquitted the accused. Mr. Palit, learned Advocate appearing for the Appellant, submitted that the learned Magistrate was wrong in acquitting the accused persons inasmuch as the definition of 'commercial establishment' as given in Sec. 2(2) of the West Bengal Shops and Establishments Act, 1963, included clerical department of a factory within the meaning of 'commercial establishment' and that, as such, the learned Magistrate went wrong in thinking that the clerical department of a factory registered under the Factories Act would not be governed by the West Bengal Shops and Establishments Act, 1963. Mr. Kumar, learned Advocate appearing for the Respondents, submitted that the learned Magistrate was justified in acquitting the accused persons first because the prosecution failed to establish that there was am clerical m department in the factory concerned and secondly, because all the workers of a factory would be governed by the Factories Act.;


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