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1976 DIGILAW 114 (PAT)

NATIONAL COAL DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION LIMITED v. UNION OF INDIA

1976-05-10

HARI LAL AGRAWAL, S.K.CHOUDHURI

body1976
JUDGMENT : H.L. Agrawal, S.K. Choudhuri, JJ. The Petitioner the National Coal Development Corporation Limited, an undertaking of the Government of India having its headquarters at Darbhanga House Ranchi, by this writ application has challenged the ORDER :dated 8th of September, 1971 contained in Annexure 6 to the writ application, passed by the Commissioner, Coal Mines Provident Fund Dhanbad (respondent no. 2) imposing a sum of Rs. 6,43.479.26 paise as damages upon the petitioner under Section 10F of the Coal Mines provident Fund and Bonus Schemes Act (Act 46 of 1948) to be referred briefly as 'the Act'. 2. The relevant facts and Circumstances leading to the passing of the impugned ORDER :are these. The petitioner admittedly owns several collieries in the State of Bihar as well as other States which are producing coal and is an 'employer' within the meaning of clause (e) of Section 2 of the Act and is liable to pay coal mines 'provident fund contribution under Section 10D of the Act. One of the units owned by the petitioner is known as Kargali colliery situated in the district of Hazaribagh. In this case we are concerned with the defaults made by the petitioner with respect to this colliery in payment of the contributions towards provident fund for the period April 1969 to November, 1970 (excluding May, 1970). Section 10D of the Act provides that the contribution payable in respect of a member under the Coal Mines Provident Fund Scheme framed under this Act, shall be payable by the employer (known as employer's contribution) and by the employee (known as employee's contribution) at such rate as may be specified under the aforesaid Scheme and the employer shall pay the employer's contribution as well as the employee's contribution, whether or not he has recovered from any employee the employee's share of the contribution. It is admitted that the scheme contemplated under Section 10D of the Act has already been framed. Under paragraph 33 A of that Scheme, the petitioner was bound to make the payment of the contribution on or before the 15th day (said to be now amended to be the last day) of every month following the month to which the contribution relate under any of the modes prescribed under the aforesaid paragraph of the Scheme. 3. Under paragraph 33 A of that Scheme, the petitioner was bound to make the payment of the contribution on or before the 15th day (said to be now amended to be the last day) of every month following the month to which the contribution relate under any of the modes prescribed under the aforesaid paragraph of the Scheme. 3. The petitioner was served with a demand notice dated 20th of March, 1971, contained in annexure 1 to the writ application, by respondent no. 2 in respect of the aforesaid damages. This notice stated that as the payments of the provident fund dues in respect of the period, already indicated above, have not been made within the prescribed time limit, damages thereon for belated payments as per provisions contained in Section 10F of the Act "have become due for payment" in terms of the notification no. S.O. 2977 published in the Gazette of India dated 8th of October, 1966. A statement was appended to this notice in pursuance of the rate of recovery of damaged appended to the aforesaid notification by a schedule. We shall refer to the schedule later and consider it in a little greater detail. The petitioner was, however, called upon to make the payment of the said amount of Rs. 6,43479,26 within one month from the date of the receipt of the said notice failing which it was to be realised as arrears of land revenue through certificate proceeding. This notice was however, modified by a registered letter of respondent no. 2 dated 29th of June, 1971 (annexure 3 to the writ petition) by which the petitioner was provided with an opportunity to file an objection, if any, to the said demand within 15 days of the receipt of this notice (annexure 3) either personally or through a duly authorised representative “when a date will be fixed, if necessary, for the hearing of the matter. It was further clarified than in the event of the failure of the petitioner to do so, the amount of demand covered by the notice would be deemed as final and conclusive and would be realised by taking proceeding under Section 10A of the Act. 4. The petitioner submitted a reply to the notice, and a copy of the same has been made annexure 4 to the writ application. The petitioner denied its liability to pay the damages on various legal grounds. 4. The petitioner submitted a reply to the notice, and a copy of the same has been made annexure 4 to the writ application. The petitioner denied its liability to pay the damages on various legal grounds. As it appears from the impugned ORDER :, namely, annexure 6 itself that in the personal hearing that was granted to the petitioner, its several representatives were present including its advocate, Legal Adviser and the Deputy Financial Adviser etc. and on their submissions four contentions were formulated which are noticed in paragraph 7 of the impugned ORDER :. We may briefly indicate those contentions thus:- (i) The provisions of Section 10F provide for recovery of damages for default in payment and not for delayed payments. The case of Kargali colliery was not a case of non-payment but was only a case of delayed payment. (ii) The provisions of the Act were ultra vires as they as they did not provide for sliding rate of damages in the Act itself. (iii) The acceptance of the delayed payments by the Provident Fund Orgainisation amounted to condonation of the delay. (iv) There was no provision in the Act for appeal against the commissioner's ORDER :regarding imposition of damages. 5. All the above contentions were rejected by respondent no. 2 and then he passed the ultimate ORDER :in these terms : “11 Damages are levied according to the provisions of the aforesaid Act and the scale prescribed by Central Government." The petitioner accordingly has been called upon to pay the said amount as damages imposed under section 10F of the Act within a month from the date of the ORDER :which is under challenge. 6. A counter-affidavit has been filed on behalf of respondent no. 2 and his stand in the said counter-affidavit is that full opportunity was given to the petitioner to place its case and, in fact, the company was fully heard and, therefore, there has been no violation of the principle of natural justice much less of any law. The definite stand of respondent no. 2 is that the company was served with a demand notice for the proposed damages which were calculated according to the rates prescribed in the notification." 7. Mr. K.D. Chatterji, appearing on behalf of the petitioner, has contended that respondent no. The definite stand of respondent no. 2 is that the company was served with a demand notice for the proposed damages which were calculated according to the rates prescribed in the notification." 7. Mr. K.D. Chatterji, appearing on behalf of the petitioner, has contended that respondent no. 2 has acted merely in a mechanical way in determining the damages in question when he was an authority enjoined with the duty to determine the damages, involving the rights of the petitioner judicially. He has further contended that the delegation of power to respondent no. 2 by the Central Government by the notification, referred to above, namely, S.O. 2977 dated 8th of October, 1966, prescribing sliding rates of recovery of damages has imposed conditions repugnant to his very power and has left him with no discretion. In ORDER :to appreciate the argument, we shall refer to the provisions contained in Section 10 F of the Act which provides for recovery of damages. Relevant portion of Section 10F of the Act runs thus :- "Where an employer makes default in the payment of any contribution or bonus or any charges payable by him under any scheme framed under this Act..............the Central Government may recover from such employer or person, as the case may be, such damages, not exceeding twenty-five per cent of the amount of arrears, as it may think fit to impose. “(emphasis is ours). The Central Government has purported to delegate its power to respondent no. 2, namely the Commissioner of Coal Mines Provident fund, in exercise of the powers contained in Section 10F of the Act. This Section provides that the Central Government may, by notification in the official Gazette, direct that any power exercisable by it under this Act or any scheme framed thereunder shall subject to such conditions, if any, as may be specified in the notification; be exercisable also by the Coat Mines Provident Fund Commissioner or any officer authorised in this behalf by the Central Government. It is under this provision that the aforesaid notification S.O. 2977 dated 8th of October, 1966 has been made and specified in column (1) of the Table therein shall, subject to the conditions specified in the corresponding entry in column (2) of the said Table, be exercisable also by the Coal Mines Provident Fund Commissioner. It is under this provision that the aforesaid notification S.O. 2977 dated 8th of October, 1966 has been made and specified in column (1) of the Table therein shall, subject to the conditions specified in the corresponding entry in column (2) of the said Table, be exercisable also by the Coal Mines Provident Fund Commissioner. It will be necessary to refer to some of the relevant provisions of column (2) of this notification which deal with the power to recover damages under Section 10F of the Act. While prescribing the power to recover damages under Section 10F of the Act, some conditions have been imposed under the table itself under the column ‘condition’. Reference may be made only to two of the conditions for the controversy raised before us which are as follows :- TABLE Power Condition (1) (2) 2. Power to recover damages under (1) Subject to a maximum of 25% Section 10F of the said Act :- of the amount of arrears, recovery (1) from any employer who makes of damages shall be made at the default in the payment of- sliding rates specified in the Schedule annexed hereto. Provided that- (a) any contribution or charges payable (a) 5 days of grace may be allowed under the Coal Mines provident Fund for making the payment during Schemes; or which period no damages shall be levied". (b) For delays upto 15 days, including days of grace, damages at half the rate specified in the said Schedule, may be levied. X X X (5) Where the amount of damages to be levied by the Coal Mines Provident Fund Commissioner does not exceed rupees two in any one case, he may, at his own discretion waive recovery of such damages. Thereafter is the Schedule which reads as under :- "Sliding rate of recovery of damages under Section 10F of the Coal Mine Provident Fund & Bonus Schemes Act, 1948. PERIOD OF DEFAULT Sl. No. of Default One month Over Over Over Over Over five months. during the year or less. one two three four month months months months up to up to up to up to two three four five months. months. months. PERIOD OF DEFAULT Sl. No. of Default One month Over Over Over Over Over five months. during the year or less. one two three four month months months months up to up to up to up to two three four five months. months. months. months 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1st default 2% of 5% of 10% of 15% of 20% of 25% of arrears arrears arrears arrears arrears arrears 2nd default 5% ,, 10% ,, 15% ,, 20% ,, 25% ,, 25% ,, 3rd default 10% ,, 15% ,, 20% ,, 25% ,, 25% ,, 25% ,, 4th default 15% ,, 20% ,, 25% ,, 25% ,, 25% ,, 25% ,, 5th default 20% ,, 25% ,, 25% ,, 25% ,, 25% ,, 25% ,, 6th or subsequent default 25% ,, 25% ,, 25% ,, 25% ,, 25% ,, 25% ,, Sd. Daljit Singh Under Secy." 8. On the basis of the above provisions it was contended by Mr. K.D. Chatterji that respondent no. 2, i.e., the Commissioner Coal Mines Provident Fund, by this delegation has not been left with any discretion as fetters have been imposed upon him to recover damages “at the sliding rates specified in the Schedule annexed hereto” so much so that condition no. (5) has fettered his discretion to this extent that he cannot waive recovery of any damage which exceeds as small amount as rupees two. Some arguments were also advanced by him that the sliding rates of recovery of damages as prescribed under the schedule were ultra vires Section 10F as the Parliament did not think to prescribe or impose any such limitation on the discretion of the Central Government or its delegate and decided to leave the matter entirely open to it to choose any rate or amount of penalty as might appear just and, proper from case to case. Learned counsel appearing on behalf of the respondents in ORDER :to meet this challenge of vires, however, adopted an argument that the Table of sliding rate was not absolute in its nature and only provided a guide-line for the guidance of the delegate, namely, the Commissioner of Coal Mines Provident Fund and, therefore, it was still open to respondent no. 2 in his discretion and wisdom to apply any rate not exceeding 25% as be might think proper in appropriate cases. 9. 2 in his discretion and wisdom to apply any rate not exceeding 25% as be might think proper in appropriate cases. 9. The Central Government, however, does not appear to have intended to lay down the sliding rates as a matter of mere guide-line and as it appears to us, definitely purporting to fix different scales and rates of penalties to be imposed in a firm manner in given circumstances practically taking away completely the discretion of the Coal Mines Provident Fund Commissioner. This court and the Supreme Court while considering this provision have made certain observations (to which we shall refer hereafter). On reference to the table, the Provident Fund Commissioner who had applied the rates as prescribed in the table, was directed to consider the case of the employer, in a judicial manner and not in a mechanical manner. On the authority of those cases discussed little late, we are inclined to take the view that the direction in the table may be merely directory in nature but not mandatory. Respondent no. 2, however, in the instant case has acted in complete violation and breach of the provisions of Section 10F under an erroneous impression that he was bound to impose the penalty only in terms of the Schedule having no right to exercise his own discretion and application of his judicial mind to the present case solely falling within the framework of the table appended to the schedule and, therefore, his ORDER :cannot be sustained in law. 10. The provision contained in Section 10F of the Act had fallen for consideration before this Court as well as the Supreme Court, in this Court An the case of (1) J.P. Lala & Sons V. Commissioner of Coal Mines Provident Fund, Dhanbad and others (1971 B.L.J.R. 998) which case itself went to the Supreme Court where the JUDGMENT : of this court was affirmed. To this decision we shall come a little later. The point urged in this case was that Section 10F of the Act suffered from the vires of excessive delegation because the Parliament in delegating the power to the Central Government to impose damages has given no guide-line for the exercise of that power. To this decision we shall come a little later. The point urged in this case was that Section 10F of the Act suffered from the vires of excessive delegation because the Parliament in delegating the power to the Central Government to impose damages has given no guide-line for the exercise of that power. This argument was repelled by this Court on reference to paragraph 33A(2) of the Coal Mines Provident Fund Scheme, where some time limit has been fixed for making the contributions and it was observed that the Parliament fixed the maximum rate of damages which could be imposed on the amount of arrears and left it to the discretion of the Central Government to determine damages in each case according to its circumstances. It was further observed that as the Parliament itself could not deal with all types of cases which might come up for consideration, it had to leave to the discretion of the Central Government to decide in the light of the special circumstances of each case what the rate of damages should be and that by putting a ceiling on the power of the Central Government to impose damages, it did not confer an uncontrolled power on the Central Government. On reference to various other sections of the Act, particularly Section 7B, it was further observed that the amount of damages under Section 10F could be determined only after the employer has been given a reasonable opportunity of representing his case. On taking a view that in that case this opportunity was denied and the Commissioner had passed the ORDER :in a mechanical manner without giving reasonable opportunity to the petitioner of that case, the ORDER :of penalty was set aside. When the matter went to the Supreme Court in (2) the Commissioner of Coal Mines Provident Fund Dhanbad and others V.J.P. Lalla and Sons [(1976) 1 Supreme Court Cases 964 A.I.R. 1976 Supreme Court 676] on considering the various provisions of the Act, the learned Chief Justice who delivered the leading JUDGMENT : for the court, observed that the provisions in Section 10F of the Act also indicated that determination of damages was not a mechanical proviso. The expression "such damages not exceeding 25 per cent of the amount of arrears as it may think fit to impose" itself eloquently Indicated that "the determination of damages is not an inflexible application of a rigid formula" and the expression "as it may think fit to impose" in Section 10F of the Act shows that "the authorities are required to apply their mind to the facts and circumstances of the case." 11. The sliding table was quoted in both the above JUDGMENT : and in spite of the definite and firm scales having been fixed by the Central Government for imposition of penalty for different class of cases of default for determined upon the extent of the default, the above observation were made which, in our view, clearly indicative that the sliding rates of recovery of damages as prescribed in the table were never intended to be applied as a matter of course. Because once that was so, then that would certainly amount to determination of damages by a mechanical process having no flexibility at all putting the case in a very rigid formula, rather in a steel jacket. 12. Some argument was advanced on behalf of the respondents that the petitioner was a habitual defaulter, and no circumstances were placed before the respondent no. 2 to mutigate the damages in any way and therefore this court should not in free-fine (Sic) as the petitioner has nothing in its favour to agree before the respondent no. 2 for imposition of any lesser penalty his argument is entirely misconceived, inasmuch as, Mr. K.D. Chatterji did not challenge for a moment the amount of damages determined by respondent no. 2. What he challenged was the application of his mind and the procedure adopted by him for the determination of the damages in question. It might well be, that the respondent no. 2 could in his wisdom and discretion still think the same amount to be the proper and reasonable amount of damages, but reading his various ORDER :s passed from the stage of the demand notice (annexure 1), already referred to earlier, up to the final ORDER :contained in annexure 6, we have no hesitation in our mind that respondent no. 2 could in his wisdom and discretion still think the same amount to be the proper and reasonable amount of damages, but reading his various ORDER :s passed from the stage of the demand notice (annexure 1), already referred to earlier, up to the final ORDER :contained in annexure 6, we have no hesitation in our mind that respondent no. 2 has always acted under an impression that once a case for damages is made out, he bas no discretion in the matter and be is bound to follow the table prescribed by the Central Government under the notification. This is what which is bad and is attacked by Mr. K.D. Chatterji and we are satisfied that there is great force in this contention. 13. To emphasise the above contention we may again refer to the operative part of the impugned ORDER :contained in paragraph 11 of annexure 6 that we have already quoted above. After dealing with the points that were raised before him on behalf of the petitioner, in one sentence in the 11th paragraph of his ORDER :be has come to the conclusion that damages were to be levied in terms of the Scheme prescribed by the Central Government. No argument is necessary much less any discussion to show that the respondent no. 2 was under a firm impression that be was bound as a matter of law to follow the table and to apply the same only in a most mechanical manner. There is nothing in the whole of the ORDER :or any other document that has been brought before us to show that respondent no. 2 could be said to have applied his own judicial discretion in the matter of imposition of the penalty in question. 14. In the result, the application succeeds and the ORDER :dated 8th of September, 1971 of respondent no. 2 contained in annexure 6 is set aside. The matter is remitted back to respondent no. 2 for passing a fresh ORDER :in accordance with law after giving a fresh notice to the petitioner. In the circumstances we shall make no ORDER :as to costs. Application allowed.