Sunday, May 26, 2019

Air India Statutory Corporation. V. United Labour Union

Petitioner AIR INDIA STATUTORY CORPORATION. Vs. Respondent UNITED LABOUR UNION & ORS. The appeals by special leave machinate from the judgment of the Division Bench of the Bombay High Court dated April 28, 1992 made in Appeal No. 146 of 1990 and batch. The facts in appeal arising out of S. L. P. 7417/92, are enough to decide the questions of law that have arisen in these appeals. The appellant initially was a statutory authority under International Airport Authority of India Act. 971 (for short, IAAI Act) and on its obliterate by the Airports Authority of India Act, 1994 was amalgamated with National Airport Authority (for short, the NAA) under single nomenclature, namely, IAAI. The IAAI is now reconstituted as a company under Companies Act, 1956. The appellants engaged, as start out labour the respondent unions members, for sweeping, clean dusting and watching of the building owned and occupied by the appellant.The Contract craunch (Regulation and Abolition) Act, 1970 (for Sho rt, the Act) regulates registration of the asylum of principal employer, the contractor gentle and supplying the contract labour in every establishment in which 20 or more workmen are employed on any twenty-four hours of the preceding 12 months as contract labour. The appellant had obtained on September 20, 1971 a certificate of registration from regional Labour Commissioner (Central) under the Act.The Central Government, utilisation the power under subsection 10 of the Act, on the basis of recommendation and in consultation with the Central Advisory Board constituted under Section 10(1) of the Act, come ond a observation on December 9,1976 prohibiting employment of contract labour on and from December 9,1976 for sweeping, cleaning, dusting and watching of buildings owned or occupied by the establishment in respect of which the appropriate government under the said act is the Central Government.However, the said prohibition would not apply to outside cleaning and other mainte nance operations of multi-storeyed building where such cleaning or maintenance cannot be carried out except with specialized experience. It would appear that Regional Labour Commissioner (Central) Bombay by letter dated January 20,1972 informed the appellant that the State Government is the appropriate Government under the Act. Therefore, by proceedings dated May 22, 1973 the Regional Labour Commissioner (Central) had revoked the registration.By Amendment Act 46 of 1982, the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 (for short, the ID Act) was made applicable to the appellant and was brought on statute book specifying the appellant as one of the industries in copulation to which the Central Government is the appropriate Government and the appellant has been carrying on its business by or under its authority with effect from August 21, 1982. The Act was amend bringing within its ambit the Central Government as appropriate Government by amendment Act 14 of 1986 with effect from January 28, 1986 .Since the appellant did not revoke the contract system and failed to enforce the notification of the Government of India dated December 9,1976, the respondents came to file judicial writ petitions for direction to the appellant to enforce forthwith the aforesaid notification abolishing the contract labour system in the aforesaid services and to direct the appellant to absorb all the employees doing cleaning, sweeping, dusting, washing and watching of the building owned or occupied by the appellant-establishment, with effect from the respective dates of their joining as contract labour in the appellants establishment with all consequential rights/benefits, monetary or otherwise, The writ petition was allowed by the leaned single judge on November 16,1989 directing that all contract workers be regularised as employees of the appellant from the date of filing of the writ petition. The issue whether the activity is of perennial nature came to be considered for various courts and it wa s held that since it is a statutory liability, therefore the nature of work is perennial. As regards the status of workmen of contractor, it is held that the workmen of the contractor do not automatically become direct employees of the principal employer even where the registration/licence is cancelled or the contract is abolished.

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