Award Settement
Award Settement
Award Settement
AWARD
ON THE
INDUSTRIAL DISPUTES
BETWEEN
BY
AI
PRESIDING OFFICER
BE
THEIR WORKMEN
JUNE, 1962
Introductory
Genesis of the dispute
Parties to the dispute
Categorisation of banks and areas
for the purposes of this adjudication
(i)
Categorisation of banks
(ii)
Categorisation of areas
Scales of pay
(i)
General
(ii)
Principles of wage fixation ...
(iii) The 15th Indian Labour Conference
(iv) Index Number
(v) Base Year
(vi) Consumption Units ... . .
(vii) Co-efficient
(viii) Ratio between minimum and maximum
(ix) Span
(x) Increments
(xi) Efficiency Bar
(xii) Capacity of the Industry to pay
(xiii) The National Income
(xiv) Productivity of labour
(xv) Erosion
(xvi) Prevailing rates of wages in comparable
concerns
(xvii) New scales of pay ...
(xviii) Poddars, Money Testers, Collecting
Sircars and gollas
(xix) Part-time employees
(xx) Apprentices
(xxi) Probationers
(xxii) Cooks and domestic servants ...
(xxiii) Supervisory staff
(xxiv) Special allowances
(xxv) Method of Adjustment in the
scale of Pay
Paragraphs
Pages
1.1 to 1.25
2.1 to 2.15
3.1 to 3.7
210
1116
1620
4.1 to 4.129
4.130 to 4.190
20-56
56-82
5.1 to 5.34
5.35 to 5.47
5.48 to 5.63
5.64 to 5.69
5.70 to 5.75
5.76 to 5.80
5.81 to 5.96
5.97 to 5.102
5.103 to 5.116
5.117 to 5.123
5.124 to 5.136
5.137 to 5.170
5.171
5.172
5.173 to 5.175
5.176 to 5.178
82102
103 108
108114
114116
116119
119120
120126
126127
127 129
129131
131134
135149
149150
150
150151
151154
5.179 to 5.188
5.189 to 5.190
154157
158
AI
I
II
III
IV
Contents
BE
Chapter
(xxvi) Reliefs
(xxvii) Dearness allowance with particular
reference to the -question whether any
part of the existing dearness allowance
should be absorbed in the basic pay
VI (i)
House Rent Allowance
(ii)
Other Allowances
(iii) Travelling Allowance and Halting
Allowance
(iv) Joining time on transfer
(v) Leave Fare Concessions
VII Provident Fund, including the rate of
contribution and the rate of interest
VIII Pension and gratuity
(i)
Gratuity
(ii)
Pension
IX Leave Rules
(i)
Existing leave rules
(ii)
Privilege leave
(iii) Casual leave
(iv) Sick leave
(v) Quarantine, Extraordinary and Maternity leave
(vi) Special Casual Leave
(vii) Study leave
(viii) Leave preparatory to retirement
X Hours of work and overtime
(i)
Hours of work
(ii)
Overtime
XI Medical aid and expenses
XII Cash deposits, fidelity bonds and other securities
to be furnished by the staff
XIII Uniforms and liveries
XIV Need for maintenance of seniority lists
XV Age of retirement
XVI Categories of workmen to whom the award of
the Tribunal should be applicable ...
XVII Subsistence allowance during period of suspension
XVIII Procedure for termination of employment and
taking other disciplinary action
TABLE OF CONTENTS
5.191
5.192
5.193
5.194 to 5.195
5.196 to 5.219
5.220 to 5.328
158159
159
159
159160
160170
170200
5.329 to 5.361
200-209
5.362 to 5.370
209-212
5.371 to 5.394
6.1 to 6.27
6.28 to 6.64
6.65 to 6.84
212-225
226-231
231-240
240-249
6.85 to 6.86
6.87 to 6.94
249
249-251
7.1 to 7.43
251-264
8.1 to 8.42
8.43 to 8.63
264-276
276-281
9.1 to 9.9
9.10 to 9.13
9.14 to 9.16
9.17
9.18
9.19 to 9.26
9.27
9.28 to 9.33
282-290
290-291
291-292
292
292
292-294
295
295-296
10.1 to 10.20
10.21 to 10.46
11.1 to 11.20
296-301
301-311
311-318
12.1 to 12.14
13.1 to 13.16
14.1 to 14.12
15.1 to 15.13
318-322
322-324
324-328
328-331
16.1 to 16.11
17.1 to 17.15
331-334
334-336
18.1 to 18.28
336-347
"E"
"F"
G
347-356
356
21.1 to 21.29
356-369
22.1 to 22.21
369-379
23.1 to 23.44
24.1 to 24.2
25.1 to 25.3
379393
394
394395
APPENDICES
Government Order/Notification No. 705, dated 21st March, I960,
No. 1449, dated 4th June, 1960, No. 704, dated 21st March, 1960
and No. 706. dated 21st March, I960
396-400
List of appearances
400-402
Interim Award, dated 14th December, 1960 ..
403-409
Order of the National Tribunal (Bank Disputes) Bombay, dated 31st October, 1960
regarding Section 34A of the Banking companies Act, 1949
409-431
Order of the National Tribunal (Bank Disputes). Bombay, dated 18th -November,
1960 regarding bringing on record the Reserve Bank of India as a party to Reference
No. I of 1960
431-440
Order of the National Tribunal (Bank Disputes), Bombay, dated 16th January 1961
regarding the issue of summons for, procedure of documents
440-444
Order of the National Tribunal (Bank Disputes), Bombay, dated 20th January 1961
regarding the furnishing of the certificates by the Reserve Bank of India under Section
34A of the Banking Companies Act, 1949
444-449
NOTIFICATION
New DeIhi-2, the 13th June 1962
S.O. 2028. In pursuance of Section 17 of the Industrial Disputes
Act, 1947 (14 of 1947), the Central Government hereby publishes the following
award of the National Industrial Tribunal, Bombay in the industrial dispute
referred to the said Tribunal by the notifications of the Government of India, in
the Ministry of Labour and Employment, Nos. S. O. 705, 1449 dated
respectively the 21st March, 1960 and the 4th June, 1960.
BEFORE THE NATIONAL INDUSTRIAL TRIBUNAL (BANK DISPUTES)
AT BOMBAY.
REFERENCE NO. I OF 1960.
BE
B
C
D
19.1 to 19.22
20.1
AI
and
Their workmen.
PRESENT:
[PLACE : Bombay.]
Dated, the 7th June, 1962.
the 21st March 1960 to all the 67 banking companies and corporations referred
to in the Order banking companies and corporations on the one hand and
their workmen on the other.
AWARD
CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTORY
BE
1.2. By an Order bearing No. S. O. 705, dated New Delhi, the 21st
March 1960, the Central Government being of the opinion that an industrial
dispute existed or was apprehended between the banking companies and
corporations specified in Schedule I to the said Order and their workmen in
respect of matters specified in Schedule II thereto, which were either matters
in, dispute or matters connected with or relevant to the dispute, and that the
dispute involved questions of national importance and also was of such a
nature that industrial establishments situated in more than one State were
likely to be interested in, or affected by such dispute, and being further of the
opinion that the dispute should be adjudicated by a National Tribunal, in
exercise of the powers conferred by sub-section (1A) of section 10 of the
Industrial Disputes Act. 1947, referred the said dispute to this National Tribunal
for adjudication. Schedule I to that order specifies the names of 67 Banks.
Schedule-ll refers to 22 matters in all. A copy of the said Order forms part of
Appendix A
1.6. It took some time to set up the secretariat of the Tribunal. On 19th
May 1960, a preliminary informal meeting was held at which representatives
of a number of banking companies and corporations and of some of the
important workmens organisations attended. At that meeting, the wishes of
those who attended in connection with the filing of the statements of claim
and the filing of the written statements to such statements of claim were
ascertained. As a result of the informal discussions which took place, notices
were issued bearing date 20th May, 1960 to all the 67 banking companies
and corporations referred to in the Order bearing No. S. O. 705 dated the
21st March 1960 and their workmen, requiring the workmen to file their
statements of claim on or before the 10th June 1960 and requiring the banking
companies and corporations to file their written statements in reply to such
statements of claim on or before the 11th July 1960 and fixing the date of the
hearing of the Reference as the 20th July 1960. By the said notices the
banks concerned were required to cause a copy of the notice to be served
upon the secretary or where there was no secretary upon the principal officer
of the Trade Union or Unions of their workmen and to exhibit a copy of it by
afixing it at or near the main entrance of all their establishments. The banks
were also requested to exhibit a translation of the said notice in the regional
language of the place where the notice was exhibited and to intimate to this
Tribunal about the aforesaid requirements having been carried out by making
and filing an affidavit to that effect. After the receipt of the Order bearing No.
S. O. 1449, dated the 4th June 1960, whereunder 17 more banks were included
in the Reference, notices dated 8th June 1960 were issued requiring the
workmen of the newly included banks to file their statements of claim on or
before the 25th June 1960 and requiring the banks concerned to file their
written statements on or before the 11th July 1960 and fixing the date of the
hearing of the Reference in their case also as the 20th July 1960. These
notices contained other directions similar to those contained in the notices
dated the 20th May 1960. The aforesaid notices have been duly served upon
the banks concerned and their workmen.
1.1. By a Notification bearing No. S. O. 704, dated New Delhi the 21st
March 1960 the Central Government in exercise of the powers conferred by
section 7B of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, constituted a National
Industrial Tribunal with headquarters at Bombay and appointed me as the
Presiding Officer of the Tribunal. A copy of the Notification forms part of
Appendix A.
AI
1.3 By another Order, bearing No. S. O. 706, dated New Delhi the 21st
March 1960, the Central Government in exercise of the powers conferred by
sub-section (3) of section 10 of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, prohibited
the continuance of the strike which was then in existence in the State Bank
of India. A copy of the said Order forms part of Appendix A.
1.4. By a further Order bearing No. S. O. 1449, dated New Delhi, the 4th
June 1960, the Central Government being of the opinion that the dispute
which had been referred by the earlier Order bearing No. S. O. 705, dated the
21st March 1960, was of such a nature that the establishments in the banking
companies and corporations specified in the Schedule to the said Order
dated the 4th June 1960, were likely to be interested in or affected by such
dispute in exercise of the powers conferred by sub-section (5) of section 10
of Ihe Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, included in the said reference the banking
Companies and corporations specified in the said Schedule. In the said
Schedule, the names of 17 banks have been set out. A copy of the said
Order forms part of Appendix A.
1.5. As a result of the aforesaid Orders, the dispute in respect of the 22
matters referred to in Schedule II to the Order bearing No. S. O. 705, dated
1.7 On 25th May 1960, the All India Bank Employees Association filed
an application, being Miscellaneous Application No. 2 of 1960, dated the
24th May I960 claiming 25% of wages with a minimum of Rs. 25 per month
by way of interim relief. By Miscellaneous Application No. 4 of 1960, dated
the 25th May 1960, the New Citizen Bank of India Supervisory Staff Union
claimed interim relief at the rate of 25% of the basic salary with a minimum of
Rs. 25 per month. The All India Bank Employees Federation, by their,
application being Miscellaneous Application No. 7 of I960, dated the 1st
June I960 applied for 25% of wages as and by way of interim relief for all
workmen. The State Bank of India Employees Association (Bengal Circle)
would be caused to the workmen if such allowances were not paid. The
question of the grant of travelling allowance and halting allowance was at one
stage linked up with the question of the representation of parties by legal
practitioners as some of the banks were desirous of being represented by
legal practitioners before the Tribunal. By section 36(4) of the Industrial
Disputes Act, 1947, it has been provided that in any proceeding before a
National Tribunal a party to a dispute may be represented by a legal practitioner
with the consent of the other parties to the proceedings and with the leave of
the National Tribunal.
1.10. The Supreme Court in the case of the Punjab National Bank Ltd.
vs. Industrial Tribunal, Delhi, and others, reported in 1957 Supreme Court
Reports Page 220 [1957 (I)LLJ 455] has held that it was a negation of Justice
and reason to direct the employer to pay in advance the travelling allowance
and halting allowance costs of the Union representatives irrespective of the
final result of the proceedings and that the practice followed by some of the
Tribunals in awarding the same was unwarranted by law and principles of
reason and justice. In that case the Supreme Court set aside the order of the
Industrial Tribunal, Delhi, granting travelling and halting allowance to the
representatives of the various Unions pending the proceedings before the
Tribunal. The Supreme Court in another case reported in 1960(I)LLJ page 567
between Rohtas Sugar Ltd. and others and Mazdoor Seva Sangh and others
set aside the order of the Labour Appellate Tribunal at Dhanbad, whereunder
the Labour Appellate Tribunal had confirmed the order of the Industrial Tribunal
which had awarded travelling allowance and halting allowance to workmen
and which had directed that the workmen attending the proceedings before
the Industrial Tribunal should be treated as, being on special leave with pay
for the period of such attendance. In view of the aforesaid decisions, it was
not possible for me to give any relief to the workmen in connection with the
grant of halting and travelling allowance or to issue any directions that the
workmen should be treated as being on special leave with pay for the period
during which they attended the proceedings before this Tribunal.
AI
BE
by Miscellaneous Application No. 5 of 1960, dated the 25th May 1960, applied
for interim relief for the workmen of the Bengal Circle of the State Bank of
India at the rate of Rs. 25 per month. The Surat Bank Employees Union by
Miscellaneous Application No. 8 of 1960, dated the 9th June 1960 and the
Vadodra Rajya Bank Nokar Sangh by Miscellaneous Application No. 9 of
1960, dated the 8th June 1960 also asked for interim relief at 25% of the
basic wages with a minimum of Rs. 25 per month for all the employees with
effect from 1st April 1959. The State Bank of India Staff Union, Andhra
Pradesh, by Miscellaneous Application No. 14 of 1960, dated the 14th June
1960 applied by way of interim relief, wages for the strike period and other
reliefs for the workmen of the State Bank of India, Andhra Pradesh. The
State Bank of Patiala (All Cadres) Employees Association by Miscellaneous
Application No. 28 of 1960. dated the 16th June 1960 claimed by way of
immediate relief 25% of wages with a minimum of Rs. 25. After 17 more
banks were included in the Reference by the Order dated the 4th June 1960,
the All India Bank Employees Association by Miscellaneous Application No.
24 of 1960, dated the 21st June 1960, applied for interim relief also on behalf
of the workmen of the newly included banks. The Pandyan Bank Employees
Union by Miscellaneous Application No. 301 of 1960, dated the 12th August
1960, adopted the application for interim relief filed by the All India Bank
Employees Association and asked for further relief. The All India State Bank
of India Staff Federation which did not for some time participatein the
proceedings before the Tribunal by Miscellaneous-Application No. 293 of
1960, dated the 19th September 1960, claimed by way of interim relief the
abolition of Class IV area, the payment of Rs. 25 per month to every worker,
the payment of wages for the period of strike and the making good the loss
due to the non-implementation of the award as enumerated.
1.8. On the 8th June I960, another application was filed by the All India
Bank Employees Association claiming travelling allowance and halting
allowance for halting at Bombay for 71 representatives of the Association.
This application was followed up by various other applications made by the
constituent units of the All India Bank Employees Association and by various
Associations and Federations numbering over 800 for the grant of travelling
allowance and halting allowance during the time the representatives of work
men attended the proceedings before this Tribunal at Bombay. Facilities
were also sought for the representatives of the unions to remain present
during the proceedings.
1.11. The aforesaid legal position was pointed out to the representatives
of the workmen.Negotiations took place between some of the parties in
connection with the grant of halting and travelling allowance. Some of the
banks being somewhat keen on having their case represented by legal
practitioners, the All India Bank Employees Association on 21st June, 1960
filed a note before this Tribunal in which it was stated as under :
In terms of clause 36(4) of Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 the
Association records its objection to the appearance of any lawyer
in the adjudication proceedings under the above reference.
1.12. The All India Bank Employees' Association, the State Bank of
India Employees Association (Bengal Circle), the Northern India Banks
Association and others filed applications for holding the sittings of the Tribunal
at different places throughout the country.
1.15 As stated in the order of reference dated 21st March, 1960 the
dispute before me involves question of national importance. Often complicated
and important questions of law have arisen for determination by me. The
constitutional validity of section 34A of the Banking Companies Act, 1949,
was questioned before me and the matter was ably argued by distinguished
lawyers. Questions relating to the jurisdiction of the Tribunal, its powers and
authority, the true scope and effect of the orders of reference and the very
right of the authority making the reference in connection with some of the
items mentioned in schedule II to the order of reference dated 21st March,
1960 were raised before me in the course of the hearing. Full justice would
not have been done to these matters if the legal practitioners who had
specialised in labour and constitutional matters had not appeared before me.
In deciding these questions I have received considerable assistance from
legal practitioners appearing before me. In connection with matters which
come up for adjudication before National Tribunals, it is desirable that the
Tribunals should have the discretion to permit any party to be represented by
a legal practitioner irrespective of the consent of the other parties to the
proceedings. Where the stakes are large and the matters are complex, it
should not be placed within the power of any party to withhold its consent to
any other party being represented by a legal practitioner until due compliance
with some of its demands, however reasonable they may be from its point of
view, and to use the power of according its consent as a lever for securing
compliance with any of its demands. At the same time a National Tribunal
with its headquarters at one place when dealing with matters
affecting.employees all over the country employed in establishments situated
in various parts of the country should be in a position to give the requisite
directions which would enable the representatives of the workmen to appear
before the Tribunal for presenting their case and remain present throughout
the hearing which may last for a fairly long period.
(a)
AI
BE
(b) Rs. 10 per day to each employee from the date of depature from
the ordinary duty station to the date of return to such duly station,
provided that when the hearing before the Tribunal was adjourned for long
periods the employees concerned would return to duty and the fare as above
would be payable on each round trip.
1.14 Ultimately with the consent of the parties and with the leave of this
Tribunal most of the banks and employees Associations and Federations
were in fact represented by legal practitioners, a number of whom had
specialised in labour laws.. A list of persons who appeared before the Tribunal
during the course of the hearing of the main Reference on behalf of the banks
and their workmen will be found in Appendix B.
1.16. The regular hearing of the applications for Interim Relief commenced
on 12th September, 1960. After arguments were advanced at considerable
length by the numerous parties appearing before the Tribunal, the hearing
was concluded on 14th November 1960. The award of this Tribunal in connection
with the aforesaid applications will be found in Appendix C.
1.17. Applications were made by various Unions and Associations and
Federations of workmen for production of certain documents by some of the
banks concerned in this reference. The earliest application was filed on 9th
June, 1960 by the All India Bank Employees Association. Before the
applications were actually heard, the Banking Companies Act, 1949, was
amended with effect from 26-8-1960 by adding therein a new section 34A.
That Section provides as under :
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in section 11 of the Industrial
Disputes Act, 1947, or any other law for the time being in force, no
banking company shall, in any proceeding under the said Act or in
(b)
(2)
(3)
For the purposes of this section, banking company shall have the
meaning assigned to it in the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947.
AI
BE
(a)
After the enactment of this new section, various banking companies and
corporations claimed that some of the documents sought to be produced
and the information disclosed thereby were of a confidential nature and that
the production or inspection of such documents and the furnishing or disclosure
of such information would involve disclosure of information relating to reserves
not shown as such by the banks concerned in their published balance sheets
or any particulars not shown therein in respect of provisions made for bad
and doubtful debts and other usual or necessary provisions. The All India
Bank Employees Association, the All India Bank Employees Federation,
the All India State Bank of India Staff Federation, the State Bank of India
Employees Association (Bengal Circle), the State Bank of India Employees
Association (Delhi Circle), the State Bank of India Staff Union, Andhra
Pradesh, Vijayawada, the State Bank of India Staff Union, Madras Circle, the
All India Bank of Baroda Employees Federation, the Vadodra Rajya Bank
Nokar Sangh, the Indian Overseas Bank Employees Union, Madras and the
1.18. On 14th September, I960, the State Bank of India Staff Union,
Andhra Pradesh, Vijayawada filed Miscellaneous Application No. 291 of 1960
for bringing on record the Reserve Bank of India as a party to the present
reference. The said application was dismissed after hearing the parties by
the order of this Tribunal, dated 18th November, 1960. A copy of the said
order will be found in Appendix E. The aforesaid Union filed before the High
BE
1.22. After the hearing of the reference had proceeded for a considerably
long time, a joint application dated 22nd February 1961 was made by the
State Bank of India Staff Union, Andhra Pradesh, Vijayawada, and the State
Bank of India Staff Union, (Madras Circle) for the issue of a Commission for
recording the evidence of Honourable Shri G. L. Nanda, Minister for Labour
and Employment, Government of India. Shri S. A. Dange, a member of the
Lok Sabha and Shri S. R. Vasavada, General Secretary of the Indian National
Trade Union Congress, Ahmedabad. The said application was supported,
inter alia, by the All India Bank Employees Association. On 7th March
1961, this Tribunal issued a Commission to the District Judge, Delhi for
examination viva voce of the Honourable Shri G. L. Nanda, and Shri S. A.
Dange and directed that the Commission should return by 24th April, 1961.
The Tribunal also issued a Commission to the District Judge, Ahmedabad for
examination viva voce of Shri S. R. Vasavada in similar terms. In order that
the proceedings of the Tribunal may not be delayed, liberty was given to all
the parties to join in the Commission and directions were given that any party
seeking to examine any witness must give notice to all other parties about
that partys intention to do so four days before such witness was examined.
The Commissioner appointed by the District Judge, Delhi, examined Shri S.
A. Dange on Commission at Delhi. The Commissions were returned
unexpected in respect of the other witness. Consequent upon the issue of
the Commission the hearing of the reference had to be adjourned to 2nd May
1961. When the hearing was resumed on 2nd May, 1961, an application
was made by the State Bank of India Staff Union, Andhra Pradesh, Vijayawada
for extending the returnable date of the Commission. The said application
was opposed by a number of parties and the same was rejected and the
hearing of the reference was resumed. The hearing of the reference was
concluded on 4th October, 1961.
AI
10
11
Gujarat High Court on 26th January, 1961 most of these applications under
section 33 or 33A of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 were transfered to
various Labour Courts in exercise of the powers conferred by the aforesaid
two Notifications.
CHAPTER II
GENESIS OF THE DISPUTE
1.24. The applications filed before this Tribunal for holding the sittings of
the Tribunal at various places in the country were ultimately not pressed.
AI
BE
1.25. The Tribunal sat in all for about 178 working days whereout 74
days were devoted to the hearing of various miscellaneous applications in
this reference and about 104 days were devoted to the main hearing of this
reference.
2.1 Before I deal with the matters which have been referred for adjudication
to this Tribunal, it is desirable to review briefly the background of the present
dispute. During the second world war there was a rise in the prices of
commodities which caused considerable hardship to persons having a fixed
income. Efforts were made by various organisations to improve the living
conditions of workmen. Banking being an all-India industry efforts were made
by the workmen employed in banks to unite together for the purpose of
improving their living conditions. In the year 1946, the All India Bank
Employees Association, which is a federation of various unions of workmen
working in various establishments of banks throughout the country, was formed
with a view to tackle the problems of labour in the banking industry on an allIndia basis. There were awards given by various Tribunals in connection with
the labour disputes that arose at diverse places in India between some of the
banks and their workmen. Banks having branches at numerous places in
India became subject to the provisions of different awards at different places.
The Government realised the necessity of dealing with the disputes in the
banking industry on an all-India basis. The Industrial Disputes (Banking and
Insurance Companies) Ordinance (No. VI of 1949) was promulgated on 30th
April, 1949, where under a banking company was defined to mean a banking
company as defined in section 5 of the Banking Companies Act, 1949, having
branches or other establishments in more than one Province, and as including
the Imperial Bank of India. By clause 4 of that Ordinance it was provided that
notwithstanding anything contained in any other law, it shall not be competent
for a Provincial Government or any officer or authority subordinate to such
Government to refer an industrial dispute concerning any banking or insurance
company, or any matter relating to such dispute, to any Tribunal or other
authority for adjudication, inquiry or settlement. The Central Government
acquired the power to refer any dispute pending before a Provincial Tribunal
to an Industrial Tribunal constituted under section 10 of the Industrial Disputes
Act for adjudication. The aforesaid Ordinance was thereafter replaced by the
Industrial Disputes (Banking and Insurance Companies) Act (LIV of 1949).
2.2 On 13th June 1949 in exercise of the powers conferred by section 7
of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 (XIV of 1947), the Central Government
constituted an Industrial Tribunal consisting of Mr. K. C. Sen, a retired judge
of the High Court of Judicature at Bombay, as Chairman and two other retired
High Court Judges as members for the adjudication of industrial disputes in
banking companies. On the same day, the Central Government in exercise
of the powers conferred by clause (c) of sub-section (1) of section 10 of the
Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, as it then stood, referred the disputes between
the numerous banking companies and their employees for adjudication by
12
13
the said Tribunal. After considerable labour and industry, the aforesaid Tribunal
gave its award on 31st July, 1950, which will hereafter be referred to as the
Sen Award.
2.6. A large number of the employees and some of the banks concerned
in the dispute felt aggreived by the provision contained in the Sastry Award
and preferred appeals therefrom before the Labour Appellate Tribunal. A special
bench of the Labour Appellate Tribunal consisting of Shri F. Jeejeebhoy, Shri
D. E. Reuben and Shri A. Dasgupta was formed for the purpose of deciding
those appeals. On 28th April 1954 the Labour Appellate Tribunal gave its
decision in the matter giving larger benefits to the employees of the banks
than those given under the Sastry Award. The said decision is hereinafter
referred to as the Labour Appellate Tribunal decision.
BE
2.3 Some of the banks which were parties to the said disputes being
dissatisfied with the award applied to the Supreme Court for special leave to
appeal against the said award as it had been specially exempted from the
jurisdiction of the Labour Appellate Tribunal constituted under the Industrial
Disputes (Appellate Tribunal) Act (XLVIII of 1950). The said leave was granted
by the Supreme Court. Pending the hearing of the appeal by the Supreme
Court, it stayed the operation of the award with regard to (1) its applicability
to certain persons who were stated to be officers and not workmen (2) the
directions contained therein regarding bonus and (3) the directions contained
therein regarding provident fund. On 9th April 1951, the Supreme Court
declared the Sen Award as being void and inoperative for technical reasons
relating to the constitution of the Tribunal. The Supreme Court did not deal
with any question relating to the merits of any matter dealt with in the award.
As a result of the decision of the Supreme Court disputes which existed in
the banking industry remained unresolved. Soon thereafter there were strikes
in some banks consequent on certain actions taken by some of the banks.
The Central Government felt obliged to pass the Industrial Disputes
(Amendment and Temporary Provisions) Act (XL of 1951), whereunder among
other things, the scales of pay and the rate of allowance according to which
certain workmen had been paid immediately before 1st April 1951, were
temporarily frozen pending any settlement or an award by a new Tribunal.
AI
2.4. The Government of India by a notification dated the 17th July, 1951
constituted an Industrial Tribunal of three persons with Mr. H. V. Divatia a
retired judge of the High Court of Judicature at Bombay as Chairman. The
Chairman and the other two members of the Tribunal resigned soon after
their Appointment.
14
2.8. The interference of the Government with the Labour Appellate Tribunal
decision raised a wave of discontent amongst the bank employees. Ultimately
on 17th September 1954 the Government appointed a one-man Commission
consisting of Shri Justice G. S. Rajadhyaksha a judge of the Bombay High
Court.
(1) to enquire into and ascertain the effects on the emoluments which
the employees were in receipt of prior to August 1954,
(a)
(b)
(2) to ascertain,
(a)
15
(b)
(c)
(3) --------------------------
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It was further provided that in considering the aforesaid matters, due regard
should also be paid to the desirability of avoiding widespread closures of
banking companies or their branches, to the necessity to promote development
of banking in the country generally and in rural areas in particular and to any
possibilities of effecting economies in the expenses of banking companies.
The Commission was also asked to consider and recommend what special
modifications, if any, were necessary in the Labour Appellate Tribunal decision
in order to encourage the spread of banking facilities in the Class IV areas of
Part B' States and Part C' States other than Delhi, Ajmer and Coorg. Shri
Justice Rajadhyaksha having died shortly after he had undertaken the burden
of the Commission, Government appointed Shri P. B. Gajendragadkar, then a
judge of the Bombay High Court, in place and stead of Shri Justice
Rajadhyaksha. The said Commission after considerable labour and gathering
considerable material made its reports on 25th July 1955 making certain
recommendations which were subsequently embodied by the Government in
the Industrial Disputes (Banking Companies) Decision Act (41 of 1955). The
said report of the Commission is hereinafter referred to as the Bank Award
Commission report. By section 3 of the Industrial Disputes (Banking
Companies) Decision Act, 1955, it was provided that the decision of the
Labour Appellate Tribunal, dated 28th April 1954, would have effect as if the
modifications recommended in Chapter XI of the Bank Award Commission
report had actually been made therein. By section 4 of the said Act, it was
provided that the award of the Sastry Tribunal as modified by the decision of
the Labour Appellate Tribunal, as further modified by the recommendations
of the Bank. Award Commission would remain in force until 31st March 1959.
16
17
3.1 By the two Orders of Reference, dated the 21st March 1960 and the
4th June 1960 disputes between 84 banks in all and their workmen have
been referred for adjudication to this Tribunal. After the constitution of this
Tribunal, material changes have taken place affecting certain banks and their
workmen.
I. Stoppage of Banking Business
(1) Safe Bank Ltd. This bank is listed as bank No. 50 in schedule I
to the Order of Reference, dated the 21st March 1960. On 22nd June 1961
the Safe Bank Ltd. intimated to this Tribunal that on 31st January 1961 the
Reserve Bank of India had sent a notice in writing to the bank informing the
bank that licence to carry on banking business could not be granted to it
under the proviso to section 22(2) of the Banking Companies Act, 1949, and
that as per orders of the Reserve Bank it had stopped banking business with
effect from 6th February 1961. As the aforesaid bank has ceased to be a
banking company within the meaning of section 2(bb) of the Industrial Disputes
Act, 1947, no award is made in connection with the dispute between the said
bank and its workmen.
BE
2.13. The statutory period for the operation of the Sastry Award as
modified expired on 31st March 1959. There has been considerable expansion
of banking as an industry in the country. The workmen employed in banks
are dissatisfied with the conditions of service under which they are working.
The 15th Session of the Indian Labour Conference, which was held on the
11th and 12th July 1957 laid down certain principles governing wage fixation.
The expectations of workmen were aroused thereby throughout the length
and breadth of the country. The expectations so aroused have remained
unfulfilled, resulting in consequent dissatisfaction and unrest. There has been
a considerable rise in the cost of living and the purchasing power of money
has declined. The workmen contend that the adjustment in the dearness
allowance which is being made under the formula in operation does not
sufficiently neutralise the effect of the increase in the cost of living.
CHAPTER III
PARTIES TO THE DISPUTE
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19
and the services of a large number of its employees have been taken over by
the Bank of Madura Limited, no award is made in connection with the dispute
between the Thomcos Bank Limited and its employees.
II.
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(4) Palai Central Bank Limited This bank is listed as bank No. 44
in scheduled I to the Order of Reference dated 21st March 1960. This bank
was ordered to be wound up by the High Court of Kerala on 5th December
1960. As this bank has gone into liquidation, no award is made in connection
with the dispute between this bank and its workmen.
3.3. The aforesaid six banks have been amalgamated with other banks.
Under the schemes of amalgamation, the workmen employed by the aforesaid
six banks, would continue in service and would be deemed to have been
appointed by the transferee banks, at the same remuneration and on the
same terms and conditions of service as were applicable to such employees
immediately prior to the date of the respective orders of moratorium. There is
a further provision to the effect that the transferee banks would pay or grant,
not later than the expiry of the period of 3 years from the dates on which the
schemes of amalgamation were respectively sanctioned by the Central
Government to such employees the same remuneration and the same terms
and conditions of service as were applicable to the employees of the respective
transferee banks of corresponding rank or status subject to certain
qualifications.
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(6) The New Citizen Bank of India Limited. This bank has been
listed as bank No. 42 in schedule I to the Order of Reference, dated the 21st
March 1960. This bank was under moratorium from 15th November I960 to
28th April 1961. This bank has been amalgamated with the Bank of Baroda
Limited (hereinafter referred to as a transferee bank) with effect from 29th
April 1961.
(7) The Travancore Forward Bank Limited. This bank is listed as
bank No. 61 in schedule I to the Order of Reference dated the 21st March
1960. Thus bank was under moratorium from 25-10-1960 to 24-3-1961. This
bank has been amalgamated with the State Bank of Travancore, Trivandrum,
(hereinafter referred to as a transferee bank) with effect from 15th May 1961.
(8) The Bank of Nagpur Limited. This bank is listed as bank No. 3
in the schedule to the Order of Reference dated the 4th June 1960. This bank
was under moratorium from 27th November 1960 to 26th March 1961. This
bank has been amalgamated with the Bank of Maharashtra Limited (hereinafter
referred to as a transferee bank) with effect from 27th March 1961.
(9) The Indo Commercial Bank Limited. This bank is listed as
bank No. 7 in the schedule to the Order of Reference, dated the 4th June
1960. This bank was under moratorium from 25-10-1960 to 24-3-1961. This
bank has been amalgamated with the Punjab National Bank Limited, New
20
21
357.
BE
3.6. I have made an award on 7th August 1961 in terms of the settlement
arrived at as aforesaid. One of the terms of the said settlement provided that
on behalf of the employees of the Trivandrum Permanent Bank Limited the
All Kerala Bank Employees Union should agree to withdraw the dispute or
disputes in respect of the employees of the Trivandrum Permanent Bank
Limited pending before this Tribunal. In pursuance of the said settlement, the
All Kerala Bank Employees Union, on behalf of the employees of the
Trivandrum Permanent Bank Limited withdrew the dispute pending before
this Tribunal. The said Award has been published in Gazette of India, Part II,
Section 3 (ii) dated 2nd September 1961, at pages 2165 2172.
(14) The Belgaum Bank Limited. This bank is shown as bank No. 5
in the schedule to the Order of Reference, dated the 4th June 1960. On 20th
January 1961 a consent award has been given in connection with the dispute
between this bank and its workmen and the said award is published in the
Gazette of India, Part II, Section 3 (ii), dated the 11th February 1961, at page
443.
3.7 This award will only apply to the banks referred to in the orders of
reference, dated the 21st March 1960 and the 4th June 1960, other than the
aforesaid 16 banks and to the workmen of the banks other than those of the
aforesaid 16 banks.
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23
these circumstances, the norm of working funds has been adopted for the
purpose of classification of banks. No doubt apart from working funds, there
are various other factors which affect the profit-making capacity of banks and
their capacity to pay wages, but in the absence of better norms of classification
which are capable of being applied with certainty and without considerable
difficulty, the norm based on the availability of working funds has come to be
accepted.
CHAPTER IV
Item No. 1 : CATEGORISATION OF BANKS AND AREAS FOR THE
PURPOSES OF THIS ADJUDICATION.
4.2. To the extent that wages are correlated to the needs of the workmen
the cost of articles of consumption and the pattern of consumption become
material factors. The same vary in different areas in different parts of the
country. The standard of living in different parts of the country is not the
same. There is disparity between the cost of living of a person in a city like
Bombay or Calcutta where living accommodation is scare and the standard
of life ishigh and of a person dwelling in semi-urban and rural areas. By and
large workmen are available at somewhat lesser rate of wages in semi-urban
and rural areas than in cities. Taking diverse factors into consideration, Tribunals
have fixed wages and other conditions of service for workmen according to
the areas in which they function.
4.3. By his award dated 8th April 1947, Mr. Justice Divatia classified the
30 banks before him into 2 groups : (1) big banks with working funds of about
Rs. 15 crores and above, and (2) small banks with working funds of less than
Rs. 15 crores. He took the view that standardization of wages was not generally
feasible in the business of banking, although the clerical staff did the same
kind of work.
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4.4. The Sen Tribunal, which was the first all-India Tribunal which dealt
with banking industry, classified banks according to the working funds. Its
classification according to the average of working funds based on the figures
of the 30th June and the 31st December of the year 1949 was as following :
Class
(A) Imperial Bank of India and all Exchange Banks included in the
reference and all other banks having average working funds of Rs.
25 crores and above.
(B) Banks having average working funds below Rs. 25 crores and not
below Rs. 7 crores.
(C) Banks having average working funds of less than of Rs. 7 crores.
4.5. The Sastry Tribunal classified banks into four classes :
Class
(A) Banks whose working funds amount to Rs. 25 crores and more
and the Exchange Banks.
(B) Banks whose working funds amount to Rs. 7 crores and more
but are below Rs. 25 crores.
(C) Banks whose working funds amount of Rs 1 crore and more but
24
25
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4.6. While providing for this rule of classification based on working funds,
the Sen Tribunal provided for the transfer of a bank from one class to another
having regard to the rise or fall in its working funds below or above the limit
prescribed for each class. In paragraph 48 of its award, the Sen Tribunal has
observed as follows :
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The Sastry Tribunal in paragraph 64 of its award made a similar provision with
the qualification that the relevant date for calculating the working funds
would be 31st December of each year, and that the change over from one
group to another should not adversely affect the total emoluments of the
existing employees drawn by them on the date of the said change over. For
the purpose of this classification, the Sastry Tribunal defined Working funds
to mean, paid-up capital, reserves and the average of the deposits for the 52
weeks of each year for which weekly returns of deposits were submitted to
the Reserve Bank of India under the provisions of the Reserve Bank of India
Act. By paragraph 65 it further directed the banks to publish and exhibit a
statement showing such average of the weekly returns of deposits in the first
month of the next succeeding calendar year together with a certificate from
its auditors as regards the correctness of the statement or a certificate from
the Reserve Bank of India to that effect.
4.7. Shri M. L. Tannan, who was a member of the Sastry Tribunal and
who is the author of Banking Law and Practice and who was for some time
the General Manager of the Punjab National Bank Ltd., has appended his
Minute of Dissent to the Sastry Award in connection with classification of
banks into different groups for the purpose of adjudication. In paragraph 650
of the award he has observed as under :
Paying capacity of individual banks will, of course, vary, as it is
26
He also suggested that an element of elasticity was cabled for in the classifi
cation of banks. He suggested that a bank which has paid, on an average, a
dividend of not more than 4 per cent (free of income-tax) over a period of three
years should be automatically placed in the class next below that to which it
would otherwise belong on the basis of the award and that it would secure
the desired measure of relief needed by the banks concerned and that as
regards the future the banks which for any two consecutive years were not
able to declare a dividend of more than 4 per cent free of income tax should
be downgraded and would continue to pay emoluments to their workmen at
the lower rate as long as the average rate of dividend for two consecutive
years did not exceed 4 per cent.
4.9. The suggestion of Shri Tannan did not find favour with his colleagues.
The suggestion would have had some value if the banks were under a legal
27
cases of banks in these two classes that seriously contested their ability to
pay. In regard to banks in C class, the Commission decided to deal with the
cases of individual banks and to record its conclusions on the capacity to
pay individually in respect of each one of these banks.
4.14. In dealing with the argument that one or two units in a class could
not bear the burden of the decision of the Labour Appellate Tribunal, the
Commission observed that if it had found that the strain on their resources
would be unreasonably high and the imposition of the burden of the Labour
Appellate Tribunal decision would expose them to a genuine and real risk, it
would unhesitatingly have recommended their exemption from the application
of the Labour Appellate Tribunal decision. In dealing with C Class banks, the
Bank Award Commission observed that when it came to C Class banks, the
difficulties of the class approach became glaring and it found that differences
in standard of management made for sharp variations in earning capacity,
that most of such banks were started by local enterprise and had a wide net
work of branches whose operating unit was very small, that the clientele also
AI
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4.10. In the course of his dissenting minute in paragraph 666 Shri Tannan
has further observed that he did not consider the growth of small banks a
desirable development, both in the interests of the banking industry as well
as from the point of view of national development, that small banks were
more exposed to financial jolts and would not be easily able to with stand
these. He also observed that small banks would not have the resources of
big banks and would not be able to give the various facilities which the latter
provided to their customers and that the ability of big banks for organized
mobilisation of rural resources was also definitely larger. He expressed himself
not to be in favour of very small banks and stated that he would like the
development of banking in this country to proceed more or less on the same
lines as in England where the number of banks was very small but the number
of banks office was very large, and that he would like to encourage strong
and healthy banks to open branch offices even in comparatively small towns.
4.11. The Labour Appellate Tribunal in giving its decision has observed
in paragraph 97 that as regards 'D' Class Banks, they were small banks with
limited resources, that for survival these banks would have to be given special
consideration and that it was doubtful whether they would be able to sustain
a wage structure higher than the minimum wage if immediately imposed. It
decided in their case to retain the scales of pay and dearness allowance
given by the Sastry Award, subject to the condition that they would apply for
a period of not more than 5 years from 1st April 1954, after which period the
scales of the C Class Banks would become applicable.
28
29
4.15. As regards banks in the D Class other than those in the then
Travancore-Cochin State, the Commission recommended that the position of
the D Class banks as at the end of March 1959 should be examined afresh in
order to arrive at a decision as to their promotion or otherwise to C Class.
Out of these banks,the Palai Central Bank Ltd. has gone into liquidation. The
Travancore forward Bank Ltd. has been amalgamated with the State Bank of
Travancore. Most of the employees of the Thomcos Bank Ltd. have been
taken over by the Bank of Madura.
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4.18. As regards the Catholic Syrian Bank Ltd., the Commission came
to the conclusion on that the Bank had the paying capacity to implement the
Labour Appellate Tribunal decision with retrospective effect from 1st April
1954.
30
31
4.21. Out of the 68 banks which are effectively under reference on the
basis of classification provided under the Sastry Award as modified 23 banks
would be in Class A, 13 banks would be in Class B, 19 banks would be in
Class C, and 13 banks would be in Class D.
4.26. The All India Bank of Baroda Employees Federation has made a
demand similar to that of the All India Bank Employees Association.
BE
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
AI
Out of the 68 banks, 57 banks are scheduled banks and 11 banks are
non-scheduled banks.
4.23. The All India Bank Employees Association has claimed that the
banks should be classified into 3 categories .as under for the purpose of
basic pay scales only :
A Class Banks, (i) Banks whose working funds amount to Rs. 25
crores and more, (ii) all the Exchange Banks, and (iii) all the
subsidiaries of the State Bank of India B Class Banks. Banks
whose working funds are Rs. 7 crores and above but below Rs.
25 crores.
C Class Banks. Banks whose working funds are below Rs. 7
crores.
The Association has further claimed that should the working funds of a
particulars bank whether by amalgamation, merger or otherwise cross and
remain higher than the upper limit set for its class continuously for a period of
52 weeks, it should automatically pass into the next higher class. In that
event the employees should be entitled to all the benefit admissible to the
32
4.27. The Indian Overseas Bank Employees Union has asked for classi
-flcation of banks into three classes; (i) A Class with working funds of Rs. 25
crores and more, (ii) B Class with working funds between 7 1/2 crores and
more but below Rs. 25 crores and C Class with working funds below Rs. 7 1/
2 crores. It however, submits that the expression working fund should include
deposits, paid up capital, all reserves, unpaid dividends, bank borrowings,
margins on letter of credits, guarantees, bills purchased and (monies due to)
sundry creditors.
4.22. The following banks which were not before the Sastry Tribunal
have come up before a National Tribunal for the first time :
4.28. The Vadodra Rajya Bank Nokar Sangh has claimed that the
classification of banks into four categories was not justified and that the
principle of equal pay for equal work should be accepted in the case of the
banking industry since the nature of work of their employees was substantially
the same irrespective of the size of the banks and the places where they are
situated. In the alternative it has claimed the classification of banks at the
most into three classes.
4.29. The South Gujarat Bank of Baroda Employees Union has claimed
that the banks should be classified into three categories : A Class banks
with working funds of Rs. 25 crores and over B Class banks with working
funds of Rs. 15 crores and over but below Rs. 25 crores and C Class banks
with working funds below Rs. 15 crores.
4.30. The Central Bank of India Employees Associations, Patna and
Muzafferpur and the Bihar Provincial Central Bank of India Employees
Association have opposed the classification of banks as a matter of principle
but they have stated that if it was not feasible to do so, banks may be divided
in two classes and not more. They have stated that those banks whose
working funds amount to Rs. 15 crores or more should be placed in A Class
and those banks whose working funds amount to less than Rs. 15 crores
may be placed in B Class.
4.31. The Cochin Commercial Bank Employees Association, Cochin,
33
has asked for classification of banks according to resources into three groups
: (i) Group A Banks whose working funds amount to Rs. 20 crores and
more, (ii) Group B Banks whose working funds amount to Rs. 5 crores
and more but below Rs. 20 crores, and (iii) Group C Banks whose working
funds amount to Rs. 1 crore and more.
4.37. The Kerala Bankers Association has in its written Statement referred
to the classification made by the Travancore Cochin Banking Inquiry
Commission, namely of C Class banks with working funds amounting to
rupees one crore and more upto 7 crores and of D Class banks with
working funds less than Rs. 1 crore and has submitted that emoluments
should be suited to the working possibility of banks.
AI
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4.33. The Indian Banks Association in its reply has stated that the
classification of banks based on working funds should be so rearranged as
to make such classification consistent with their earning capacity so that the
present classification in four categories may remain unchanged. The Indian
Banks Association craved liberty to submit at the hearing the relevant figures
for fixing the limits of working funds for classification of banks. At the hearing
when it was called upon to make its submission in the matter, it claimed that
Class A should comprise banks with working funds of Rs. 40 crores and
above, that Class B should comprise banks with working funds of Rs.12
crores and above but less than Rs. 40 crores, that Class C-l should comprise
banks with working funds of Rs. 7 crores and above but less than Rs. 12
crores that Class C-2 should comprise banks with working funds of Rs. 2
crores and above but less than Rs. 7 crores and that Class D should comprise
banks with working funds below Rs. 2 crores. The Indian Banks Association
has resisted the demand that when the working funds of any bank crossed
and remained higher than the upper limits set for its class continuously for a
period of 52 weeks, it should automatically pass into the next higher class.
The Association submitted that the principles laid down in para 64 of the
Sastry Award and the period of two years provided therein for the changeover
from one class to another whether higher or lower should remain unaffected
having regard to the fact that two years was a fair period for a bank to adjust
itself to the new classification.
4.32. The Allahabad Bank Employees Union, Calcutta, the State Bank
of Patiala, (All Cadres) Employees Association and the Employees
Association of the Union Bank of Bijapur and Sholapur more or less took the
same stand as that of the All India Bank Employees Association.
34
4.38. The Northern India Banks Association in its written Statement has
submitted that in view of the financial position and paying capacity of different
classes of banks, it was necessary that besides A, B and C Class banks
there should also be D Class banks whose working funds were below Rs. 1
crore, as already provided in the Sastry Award. It has further submitted that
in view of the rapidly increasing urban population as a result of industrialization
through-which we are passing, and in view of the development of small scale
and medium sized industries as a part of our well considered national policy,
the need for small banks was bound to continue and hence there was a case
for D Class banks. The Association has further submitted that only when
the working fund of a bank, whether by amalgamation, merger or otherwise,
crossed and remained higher than the upper limit set for its class continuously
for a period of two years, as provided in the Sastry Award, it should pass into
a higher class and in that case the employees should have the benefit of a
higher minimum starting pay only along with dearness allowance and other
amenities applicable to the higher class bank.
4.39. The National Bank of Lahore Ltd. in its written Statement has
submitted that the classification of banks into different categories was on
appropriate method and was not objected to by the bank. The Bank had no
suggestion to offer with regard to the classification of "A" Class and "B
Class banks. So far as the classification of C Class banks was concerned,
35
4.45. The Miraj State Bank Ltd. by its Written Statement has submitted
that the bank was an extremely small one from the point of view of its paid-up
capital as well as from the point of view of its total working funds, that it is
situated, along with all its branches, at places none of which had a population
of more than 75,000, that three of its branches were situated in places having
populations ranging from 10,000 to 20,000 and that in view of this circumstance
and in view of the general financial position of the bank, the bank should be
exempted from the provisions of the award of this Tribunal. Without prejudice,
the bank has submitted that the bank could not even afford the scales of pay
and dearness allowance, as well as the terms and conditions of employment
prescribed by the Sastry Award, as modified by the report of the Bank
Award Commission and therefore deserved to be placed in a class of its own,
which may be called E class.
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the bank submitted that banks with the working funds of at least Rs. 15
crores should be classified as C Class banks because under the newly
introduced rules by the Reserve Bank of India, a major portion of the working
capital of the banks would not be utilised by the banks themselves for the
earning of profits, but would be so utilised by the Reserve Bank of India. The
bank submitted that this necessarily would lead to diminition in the earning
capacity of the banks in general and the C Class banks in particular. The
bank further submitted that the wages which were being paid and which
would have to be paid would remain unaffected by the reduction of the capacity
to earn profits and consequently Rs. 7 crores working capital for a C
Class bank would not enable it to meet the expenses imposed upon it by the
previous awards and those that might be imposed hereafter. The bank
submitted further that it was not merely the increase in the volume of work
that should entitle the workmen to a wage higher than that fixed by the award
but the continuity of working fund for a full year coupled with comparative
increase in the profit should if at all be a matter for consideration. It has
submitted that there should also be a provision that if for any reason the
working capital of a bank suffers a reduction, then there should be a reduction
in the wages of the employees also.
4.41. The .Bhratha Lakshmi Bank Ltd. by its Written Statement has
submitted that in respect of D class banks the limit of Rs. one crore should
be increased to Rs. 3 crores, as the limit of Rs. 1 crore suggested in 1952
was equal to and in any case not less than Rs. 2 crores today.
4.42. The Gadodia Bank Ltd., by its Written Statement submitted that
there should be 4 categories of banks, A, B, C, and D classified on the basis
of average working fund. The bank submitted that in the case of D Class
banks in view of their financial position and with a view to allow them opportunity
to grow and become stronger and stronger, it may be provided that those
banks who have attained the upper limit step in into C Class provided that the
working funds remain continuously at least for 2 years.
4.43. The Jaya Laxmi Bank Ltd. by its Written Statement has suggested
that D Class bank may be categorised with working funds of less than Rs.
3 crores and stated that if that was not done, small banks would be put to a
lot of inconvenience to implement the new proposed wage structure.
4.44. The Vijaya Bank Ltd. by its Written Statement has stated that the
36
37
4.52. This demand has been resisted by the State Bank of India. It was
urged that the State Bank, which is the creature of a statute, has to carry on
banking business on sound business principles and has to enlarge itself in
the rural areas irrespective of the fact whether its branches in such areas
would fetch profit or not. Shri Sachin Chaudhary who appeared for the State
Bank of India pointed out that two somewhat contradictory obligations had
been imposed on the State Bank of India viz. it was under an obligation to run
the institution on sound banking principles and it was under an obligation to
extend banking facilities to rural areas even though it may result in a loss. It
was also pointed out that the State Bank of India was a bank in the public
sector working for the benefit of the public and that its profits were turned over
to the Government. He stated that it was incorrect to say that because the
Reserve Bank held a major portion of the shares of the State Bank of India,
the Reserve Bank became the owner of the State Bank of India.
AI
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4.48. In the banking industry, the paid-up capital and reserves constitute
a small part of the total working funds. Dividends have to be paid only on the
paid-up capital. It is neither proper nor just to classify banks on the basis
suggested by the Indian Banks Association. It would mean, a disturbance at
all levels, adversely affecting the emoluments of the employees. No cogent
or convincing reasons have been adduced and no evidence has been led
which would justify the suggested classification. I see no reason to accede
to the demand made on behalf of the Indian Banks Association in this
connection.
of the State Bank were held by the Reserve Bank of India and that when
carrying on ordinary business the Reserve Bank called itself the State Bank
of India and carried on commercial banking business. It was argued further
that the relationship between the State Bank of India and the Reserve Bank
of India was not exclusively or merely that of a company and its share holder
or that of a mere agent and its principal. The State Bank was in a class by
itself created by the statute, a position which could not be claimed in respect
of the biggest of the A Class banks. It was submitted that the State Bank of
India should be placed in a class higher than that of A Class banks.
4.49. The limit placed by the Sastry Tribunal in connection with A class
banks, viz., banks whose working funds amount to 25 crores and more,
appears to me to be fair and reasonable and there is no reason to disturb the
same.
4.50 The next question that will require to be considered is whether the
State Bank of India should be regarded as a bank falling within this class or
should be excepted from this class and should have scales of pay and other
service conditions of its own.
38
4.54. Having considered all aspects of the matter, I am of the view that
though the State Bank of India has special and peculiar features of its own,
there is no case made out for treating this bank on a footing higher than the
one occupied by A Class banks. On the one hand, it has the advantage of
having very extensive working funds whilst on the other it has to bear the
burden of the Government policy relating to the expansion of banking and in
particular in rural areas. In fact the Integration and Development Fund has
been constituted to meet some of the losses incurred by the State Bank of
India in opening some of its branches in accordance with its expansion
programme. In my view, the interests of the workmen are sufficiently
safeguarded by putting the bank in Class A. Accordingly I reject the demand
39
BE
4.56. The demand of the employees has been resisted by the State
Bank Subsidiaries. It was submitted that the demand was unreasonable and
unjustified and had no basis either in fact or in equity. It was further submitted
that the subsidiary banks had imposed on them by statute obligations and
duties which involved carrying on business in areas in which normally no
commercial bank would consider transacting business on economic grounds
and that there was in fact a case for lessening the burden which they would
have to bear as B Class banks.
4.57.The subsidiaries of the State Bank of India are the following :
The State Bank of Bikaner,
The State Bank of Hyderabad,
The State Bank of Indore,
The State Bank of Jaipur,
The State Bank of Mysore,
The State Bank of Travancore,
The State Bank of Patiala, and
The State Bank of Saurashtra.
AI
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
These Subsidiaries are now governed by the State Bank of India (Subsidiary
Banks) Act. 1959. Six of these banks were constituted under the said Act.
The State Bank of Hyderabad and the State Bank of Saurashtra have been
constituted under different enactments. By section 9 of the said Act it has
been provided that on the constitution of the aforesaid new banks, under the
said Act all shares in the capital of the corresponding banks, where such
corresponding banks have a share capital, shall stand transferred to and
shall vest in, the State Bank, free of all trusts, liabilities and encumbrances.
There is a provision that no increase or reduction in the issued capital of a
new bank shall be made in such a manner that the State Bank of India holds
at any time less than 55 per cent of the issued capital of that bank. By
section 24 the State Bank is empowered from time to time to give directions
and instructions to a subsidiary bank in regard to any of its affairs and
business, and such subsidiary bank would be bound to comply with the
directions and instructions so given. Subject to any such directions and
40
4.59. By section 40 it is provided that after making provision for bad and
doubtful debts, depreciation in assets, equalisation of dividends, contribution
to staff and superannuation funds and for all other matters for which provision
is necessary by or under the Act or which are usually provided for by banking
companies, a subsidiary bank may, out of its net profits, declare a dividend.
4.60. By section 48 it is provided that a subsidiary bank may accept any
subsidies offered by the State Bank to meet:
(a)
(b)
41
India, the subsidiary banks have opened between 1st October 1959 and 30th
June 1960, 36 branches to cater to the needs of the rural and semi-urban
areas in the former Part B States by providing banking and credit facilities to
those areas. Merely because the State Bank of India has a controlling voice
in the affairs of the Subsidiaries, I would not be justified in placing any
Subsidiary bank in a class above the one in which it would ordinarily be
placed, so as to impose upon such bank a larger burden than that which it
would otherwise have to bear. I cannot accede to the demand of the workmen
in this connection.
AI
BE
4.62. I shall now deal with banks falling in the present Class C, namely,
banks whose working funds amount to Rs. 1 crore and more but are below
Rs. 7 1/2 crores. As a result of the report of the Bank Award Commission
and the enactment of the Industrial Disputes (Banking Companies) Decision
Act (41 of 1955) and the Industrial Disputes (Banking Companies) Decision
(Amendment) Act (40 of 1957), this class, for certain purposes has been
sub-divided into two classes one, the class known as Class C-l and the
other the class known as Class C-2. Class C-l consists of (1) the Bank of
Punjab Ltd., (2) the Bank of Indore Ltd., (now the State Bank of Indore). State
Bank of Jaipur Ltd., (now the State Bank of Jaipur), (4) the Bank of Maharashtra
Ltd., (5) the Canara Banking Corporation Ltd., (6) the Canara Industrial and
Banking Syndicate Ltd., (7) the Hind Bank Ltd., (8) the Travancore Bank
Ltd.. (now the State Bank of Travancore); (9) the South Indian Bank Ltd., and
(10) the Catholic Syrian Bank Ltd., The aforesaid banks were considered to
be in a position to bear the burden of the dearness allowance as awarded by
the decision of the Labour Appellate Tribunal. This Class C-l would also
comprise banks which, since the date of the Sastry Award, have been
upgraded from Class D to Class C by reason of the increase in their working
funds so as to amount to Rs. 1 crore and more for the period provided by the
Sastry Award. Class C-2 comprises banks which, fell within Class C under
the Sastry Award other than the aforesaid banks falling within Class C-l. The
banks falling within Class C-2 were not considered to be in a position to bear
the burden of dearness allowance provided by the decision of the Labour
Appellate Tribunal. Out of the banks which appear before me, only the following
six banks fall within Class C-2, namely (1) the Bank of Rajasthan Ltd., (2) the
Hindustan Commercial Bank Ltd., (3) the National Bank of Lahore Ltd., (4)
the Punjab and Sind Bank Ltd., (5) the United Industrial Bank Ltd., and (6)
the Pandyan Bank Ltd.
4.63. Though all the banks comprised in Class C-l and Class C-2 fall
within Class C, the total remuneration (excluding house rent) payable to
workmen employed by banks falling within Class C-l varies to a very
42
4.65. There is thus a very wide divergence between the total amounts of
basic pay and dearness allowance payable to employees of banks falling
within C Class depending on whether a bank is placed in C-1 group or C-2
group. When we come however to Area IV, the remuneration payable by C-l
Class bank and by a C-2 Class bank to workmen in the clerical grade is the
same. So is the case with workers in the subordinate grade.
4.66. The position appears to be very much more anomalous when one
considers the case of a bank which was in D Class at the time of the Labour
Appellate Tribunals decision and subsequently was upgraded by reason of
its working funds touching or crossing the limit of Rs. 1 crore for the prescribed
period. It then gets upgraded into C Class and has then to pay remuneration
payable by a C-l Class bank.
Thus, a bank whose working funds at the time of the Labour Appellate
43
Tribunals decision were less than the working funds of a C-2 Class bank has
to pay more than a C-2 Class bank, even though after upgradation its working
funds may be less than those of a C-2 Class Bank. The reason for the creation
of this new C-2 Class was the inability of the banks falling within C-2 Class to
meet the burden of the dearness allowance imposed by the decision of the
Labour Appellate Tribunal. I will proceed to examine the case of the six
banks which at present fall within C-2 Class, to see whether there is any
necessity now to provide for their workmen a lower remuneration than the
remuneration payable by other banks falling within C Class.
BE
4.67. The Bank of Rajasthan Ltd. This bank was established in the
year 1943 with its registered office at Udaipur. As shown in the Statistical
Tables, in the years 1959 and 1960,it had a paid-up capital of Rs. 9,24,000,
its reserves were Rs. 5,45,000 in the year 1959 which rose to Rs. 8,01,000 in
the year 1960, and its deposits were Rs. 4,90,61,000 in the year 1959 and
Rs. 5,32,92,000 in the year I960. Its total working funds as on 31st December
1961, as given by the bank, amounted to Rs. 6,07,99,000. This bank declared
dividends at the rates following : In the year 1950 at 4%, in the year 1951
at 4%, in the year 1952 at 3%, in the year 1953 at 3%, in the year 1954
at 3%, in the year 1955 at 3%, in the year 1956 at 4%, in the year 1957
at 6%, in the year 1958 at 6%, in the year 1959 at 8% taxable and in the year
1960 at 10% taxable. This bank had 31 branches including the head office,
but excluding the purely administrative offices in the year 1959. It had 35
branches including the head office but excluding the purely administrative
offices in the year 1960.
footing as other banks falling within Class C. In view of the present financial
position of the bank and the progress made by it in the past few years, it
should not experience any difficulty in meeting the increased burden imposed
upon it as a result of the abolition of C-2 Class.
AI
4.68. In its written statement, this bank has stated that on 31-12-1959
twenty three of its branches were in towns with a population of less than
30,000 and that it caters to the needs of small businessmen and rural
population. It has pleaded that it has no capacity to pay wages at scales
higher than those which it is at present paying and that it will not be able to
maintain its present rate of dividend if it is made to pay increased rates of
wages. It has stated that if it is asked to pay emoluments to its workmen on
the basis of the bank being regarded as a C-l Class bank, it would have to
incur an additional expenditure of Rs. 86,630 which would considerably reduce
its balance of profits. In the year ended 31st December 1960, it has shown
that it made a profit of Rs. 3,36,202/- and that if it had to pay C-l Class wages
for the year 1960 the profits would have been reduced to Rs. 2,49,572.
4.69. This bank has 23 branches in Area IV and 6 branches in Area III as
on 31st December 1960. In Area III the number of members of its clerical
staff was 64 and the number of members of its subordinate staff was 36. In
Area IV number of members of its clerical staff was 99 and that of sub ordinate
staff was 83. The basic wages and dearness allowance payable by C-l and
C-2 Class banks in Area IV are the same.
There is no reason why this bank should not be treated on the same
44
Year
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
Profits
Rs.
61,000
1,14,000
32,000
61,000
1,49,000
81,000
31,000
71,000
4,000
3,000
1,38,000
65,000
68,000
45
bank is in the private sector. It has not declared any dividend since its inception
and has not shown such profits as are ordinarily made by banks situated in
similar circumstances. In the absence of any satisfactory evidence led to
explain the paucity of its profits, there is no reason why this bank should not
pay to its employees the same amount of wages which other banks in the
same class have to pay to their employees.
fair and reasonable but in case this Honble Tribunal finds it necessary
to change the scales of pay we propose the following scales of pay
applicable to clerical and subordinate staff in C Class banks.
SCALES OF WAGES
(Clerks)
Class C Banks
Area I
Rs. 705105614771968252E.B.9315.
Area II
Area III
Area IV
Area I to
AI
BE
4.72. The above scales are better than the scales prescribed by the
Labour Appellate Tribunal for clerical staff in C Class banks. They are much
better than the scales of pay prescribed by the Labour Appellate Tribunal for
the members of the subordinate staff employed by C Class banks except for
the first few years of service in Area I.
46
4.73. Having considered all aspects of the matter, in my view, this bank
will be able to bear the burden of the increased establishment charges under
my award as a C Class bank.
4.74. The Punjab and Sind Bank Limited, Amritsar : This bank
was incorporated in the year 1908. As shown in the Statistical Tables the
paid-up capital of this bank in the year 1959 was Rs. 3,87,000 and in the year
1960 was Rs. 3,88,000, its reserves were Rs. 12,10,000 in the year 1959 and
Rs. 10,75,000 in the year 1960, and its deposits were Rs. 1,88,11,000 in the
year 1959 and Rs. 2,13,17,000 in the year 1960. Its working funds for the
year 1961 as shown by the bank amounted to Rs. 2,34,92,800. This bank
had, in the year 1960, 13 branches including the head office but excluding
purely administrative offices. It had three branches in Area I, six branches in
Area II and three branches in Area IV. During the year 1959, this bank made
a net profit of Rs. 26,919. During the year 1960, it made a net profit of Rs.
12,286. In the balance-sheet for the year 1960, it is stated that lower profit
was partly due to the increase in establishment expenses as a result of reorganisation to improve efficiency of work at branches and partly due to higher
liquidity which was maintained in the second half year due to uncertain
conditions. It is further stated in the balance sheet that the deposits had
increased by about Rs. 25 lacs and loans and advances as on 31st December
stood at a higher figure by about rupees sixteen lacs. This bank paid dividends
at the rate of five per cent during the years 1954 to 1957. It has declared no
47
Roy and their respective sons. The head office of the bank is housed in part
of the premises belonging to the Roy family. It is stated that Shri J. N. Roy
and Shri P. N. Roy at their own cost installed counters in the premises of the
bank at a cost exceeding about Rs. 30,000 and also installed a strong room
and a record room at an expense of about Rs. 40,000.
4.75. The United Industrial Bank Ltd. Its paid-up capital between
1950 to 1960 has all throughout been Rs. 27,66,000. Its reserves were Rs.
4,60,000 in the year 1950, they went down to Rs. 3,50,000 in the year 1951,
they went up again to Rs. 5,30,000 in the year 1954, they dwindled to Rs.
3,66,000 in the year 1955, rose to Rs. 4,85,000 in the year 1956, they went
down to Rs. 3,72,000 in the year 1959 and went up to Rs. 3,74,000 in the
year 1960. Its total deposits were Rs. 1,33,76,000 in the year 1950, Rs.
1,16,82,000 in the year 1951, Rs. 1,06, 94,000 in the year 1952, Rs. 1,18,90,000
in the year 1953, Rs. 1,17,16,000 in the year 1954, Rs. 1,04,07,000 in the
year l955, Rs. 1,18,28,000 in the year 1956, Rs. 1,46,26,000 in the year
1957, Rs. 135,18,000 in the year 1958, Rs. 1,42,95,000 in the year 1959 and
Rs. 1,31,20,000 in the year 1960. Its working funds for the year 1961 as
shown by the bank amounted to Rs. 1,90,22,080. In accordance with its
published balance sheets, in round figures, this bank made a loss of Rs.
14,000 in the year 1952, made a profit of Rs. 47,800 in the year 1953, made
a loss of Rs. 32,000, in the year 1954, made a loss of Rs. 22,000 in the year
1955, made a profit of Rs. 47,100 in the year 1956, made a profit of Rs. 7,000
in the year 1957, made a loss of Rs. 44,800 in the year 1958, made a loss of
Rs. 92,900 in the year 1959 and made a small profit of Rs. 1,878 in the year
1960. It is stated in the balance sheet of the bank for the year 1960 that no
provision was required to be made for taxation that year as tax aggregating to
Rs. 56,551 already deducted at source from the yield on the banks
investments was due to be refunded to the bank. This bank has 7 branches
in all including the head office. Five of its branches, including the head office,.are
within the municipal area of Calcutta. One branch is at Patna and another
branch is at Naraingunge in East Pakistan. It has filed a written statement
claiming that having regard to its own peculiar financial position, the losses it
has incurred or the small profits that have been made in some years, the
gradual decrease in the ratio of profits to working funds since 1954 and
particularly the inadequacy of the banks working funds during the recent
years, it may be treated as a small unit on a special footing. It has submitted
that the losses incurred by the bank in recent years were partly due to the
mounting wage bills of the workmen staff and partly due to other circumstances
over which the bank had no control. What those circumstances beyond the
banks control are has not been specified. The bank in the year 1959. employed
in all 129 workmen, 71 of whom belonged to the clerical staff and 58 of whom
belonged to the subordinate staff. A statement has been filed on behalf of the
bank showing that as on 31-12-1959 out of a total 37,500 shares of the bank
24,000 shares were held in the aggregate by Shri J. N. Roy and Shri P. N.
4.76. This bank operates principally within the municipal limits of Calcutta.
It is a bank in the private sector. For over 10 years the bank has continued its
existence without declaring any dividend. No evidence has been led by the
bank to show any special reasons why it is making losses or only small
profits whereas other banks are making considerable profits. No evidence
has been led of any special circumstances peculiar to the bank which would
require this bank to be treated on any special footing so that it should pay
lesser amounts by way of wages to its employees than other banks similarly
situated. In my view, it should pay wages appropriate to its class under this
award.
dividends for the years 1958, 1959 and 1960. This bank is a member of the
Northern India Banks Association and the offer made on its behalf is similar
to the offer made on behalf of the National Bank of Lahore Ltd. In my view,
this bank would be able to bear the burden of the scales of pay and the other
provisions contained in my award as a C Class bank under my award.
AI
BE
4.77. The Pandyan Bank Limited. This bank was established in the
year 1946. As shown in the Statistical Tables its paid-up capital for the years
1959 and 1960 was Rs. 15,00,000, its reserves for the year 1959 were Rs.
11,45,000 and for the year 1960 were Rs. 13,95,000 and its deposits for the
year 1959 were Rs. 5,51,77,000 and for the year 1960 Rs. 4,34,01,000. Its
working funds for the year 1961 as shown by the bank were Rs. 4,29,31,000.
It had 82 branches including the head office but excluding the purely
administrative offices during the year 1959 and 83 branches excluding the
purely administrative offices during the year I960. It is one of the well-managed
banks in the country. In the year 1958, it made a profit of Rs. 4,18,925, which
rose to Rs. 7,14,840 in the year 1959 and to Rs. 7,50,005 in the year 1960.
During the year 1958 it distributed free of tax, dividend at the rate of ten per
cent on the paid-up capital of the company. In the year 1959, it distributed a
gross dividend of 14.29 per cent on the paid-up capital of the company.
During the year 1960, it distributed a gross dividend of ten per cent on the
paid-up capital of the company.
48
4.78. This bank had entered into an agreement regarding wages with its
workmen before the Bank Award Commission.
4.79. This bank will be able to bear the burden of a C Class Bank under
my award.
4.80. Having considered the position of all banks which are at present in
C-2 Class, I do not see any necessity of having any separate provision made
for them. They will pay the remuneration payable by C Class banks under
this Award.
4.81. I will next consider the case of D Class banks. It is strongly urged
before me that there is no necessity for maintaining this class. The Labour
Appellate Tribunal had provided in connection with this class of banks that
the scales of pay and dearness allowance given under the Sastry Award
49
be devised in order to make them sound and viable units. The question
also arises in this context as to whether some powers of compulsion
are required for effecting a merger in appropriate cases. * * * On
all grounds it is desirable that we start afresh with a banking structure
which is sound and sufficiently broad-based to take on the increasing
responsibilities that will fall on it during the Third Five Year Plan period.
From this point of view clearly one could not contemplate with
equanimity an indefinite or prolonged extension of tutelage for
substandard banks in various stages of difficulty.
Reliance was also placed on another speech delivered by the Governor of
the Reserve Bank as President of the Indian Institute of Bankers, at the annual
general meeting on August 10, 1961, where he has observed as under :
50
The view is often expressed that small banks are per se more worthy
of encouragement than branches of banks on the ground that the
management of small banks, because of their direct and intimate
touch with borrowers and local economic conditions, are in a better
position to serve the banking needs of the community. On this ground
it has been suggested that the large number of small banks in our
country should, if there is a prospect of their being reasonably wellrun, countinue and not be subjected to a process of amalgamation.
AI
BE
would govern them, subject to the condition that they would apply for a period
of not more than five years from 1st April 1954 after which period the scales
of pay and dearness allowance of C Class banks would become applicable
to them. The Bank Award Commission, however, recommended that as
regards the banks in D Class other than those in the then Travancore-Cochin
State, their position as at the end of March 1959 should be examined afresh
in order to arrive at a decision about their promotion or otherwise to C Class.
It has been contended before me that the abolition of Class D would quicken
the pace of amalgamation of small banks with others and that such
amalgamation was in the national interest. It was contended that the policy
of amalgamation was backed by the Reserve Bank of India and that the
amendment of the Banking Companies Act empowered the Reserve Bank to
take such steps for amalgamation. By the Banking Companies (Second
Amendment) Act, 1960 (37 of 1960), Parliament has amended section 45 of
the Banking Companies Act. By this amendment it has been provided that
where it appears to the Reserve Bank that there was good reason so to do, it
may apply to the Central Government for an order of moratorium in respect of
banking companies. It is further provided that during the period of moratorium
if the Reserve Bank was satisfied that in the general interest or in the interest
of the depositors or in order to secure proper management of the banking
company or in the interest of the banking system of the country as a whole it
was necessary so to do, the Reserve Bank may prepare a scheme for the
reconstruction of the banking company or for the amalgamation of the banking
company with any other banking institution. Reliance was also placed upon
the speech of the Governor of the Reserve Bank of India in his inaugural
address delivered at the Second Indian Conference on Research in National
Income, on 31st August 1960. In the course of his address Shri lyengar has
observed as follows :
51
out.
4.87. This bank has 12 branches including the head office but excluding
the purely administrative offices. Its net profit for the year 1958 was Rs.
1,67,883/- and it distributed a six per cent dividend free of income tax, utilising
Rs. 25.370/- for the purpose. For the year 1959, it made a profit of Rs. 1,42,318/
- and distributed a dividend of 8 per cent taxable at source and utilised Rs.
36,971/- for the purpose. For the year 1960, it made a profit of Rs. 1,13,000
and distributed a five per cent dividend. Out of its 12 branches, 7 are in area
IV, 2 are in area III and 3 are in area II and all its branches, except the branch
at Coimbatore, are in Kerala State. It has stated that during the year 1959 it
employed 27 peons and 58 clerks in all.
4.89. This bank was established in the year 1943. It has in all 8 offices
including the Head Office but excluding the purely administrative offices. As
shown by the Statistical Tables, its paid-up capital in the years 1959 and
1960 was Rs. 10,00,000; its reserves for the year 1959 were Rs. 1,18,000
and for the year 1960 were Rs. 1,50,000 and its total deposits in the year
1959 were Rs. 92,77,000 and in the year 1960 were Rs. 89,54,000. It made
a net profit of Rs. 72,510 in the year 1959 and of Rs. 78,165 in the year 1960.
The bank has not declared any dividend during the years 1953 to 1960. The
working funds of the bank for the year 1959 exceed Rs. 1 crore. The working
funds of the bank as given by the bank for the year 1960 amount to Rs.
1,08,00,000 and for the year 1961 amount to Rs. 94,50,000. Out of 8 offices,
5 are in Area I and 3 are in Area II. In the year 1959 this bank employed 59
persons in the clerical cadre, 4 in the supervisory cadre and 29 in the
subordinate cadre.
AI
BE
4.88. This bank has just emerged from D Class and it is but fair that it
should have a little time to adjust itself so as to fall in line with other C Class
banks under this award.
52
4.90. By reason of the increase in its working funds over rupees one
crore continuously for a period of two years as provided in the Sastry Award
this bank would fall in Class C-l according to the Sastry Award as modified.
4.91. In view of the fact that this bank has gone into C-l Class during the
pendency of the proceedings before this Tribunal, it is necessary that it should
have a little time to adjust itself so as to fall in line with other C Class banks
under this award.
(3) The Jaya Laxmi Bank Ltd-, Mangalore.
4.92. This non-scheduled bank was established in the year 1923. The
Statistical Tables show that its paid-up capital for the years 1959 and 1960
was Rs. 5,00,000, its reserves in the year 1959 were Rs. 2,12,000 and in the
year 1960 were Rs. 2,20,000 and its deposits for the year 1959 were Rs.
87,79,000 and for the year 1960 were Rs. 1,02,33,000. The working funds of
this bank as on 31st December 1960 and 31st December 1961 as given by
53
the bank, have been Rs. 1,06,68,753 and Rs. 1,10,45,957 respectively.
4.93. For two years in succession, this banks working funds have
exceeded rupees one crore. This bank has ceased to be a D Class bank and
is liable to be regarded as a C-l Class bank, under the Sastry Award as
modified. It made a profit of Rs. 55,000 in the year 1959 and of Rs. 41,000 in
the year 1960. It declared a dividend of 8 per cent subject to tax for the year
1959 and of 6 per cent subject to tax for the year 1960. This bank has 3
branches in Area II, 1 branch in Area III and 10 branches in Area IV.
4.94. The bank has filed a written statement. It has pleaded that the new
wage structure proposed to be considered would be beyond the capacity of
smaller banks and that the same may not be made applicable to this bank.
4.99. This bank was established in the year 1929. As shown by the
Statistical Tables, its paid-up capital during the year 1959 and 1960 was Rs.
7,00,000, its reserves were, for the year 1959, Rs. 1,15,000 and for the year
1960, Rs. 1,22,000 and its deposits for the year 1959, were Rs. 86,82,000
and for the year 1960, were Rs. 86,88,000. Its working funds, as on 31st
December 1961, as given by the bank, amounted to Rs. 96,42,000. This
bank had 16 branches in the years 1959 and 1960 including the head office,
but excluding purely administrative offices. This bank has filed a statement
showing net profits, not losses etc., made by the bank during the years 1929
to 1959 and also showing the amount of dividends declared. It appears from
the statement that except during the years 1949, 1952 and 1954, when the
bank had made losses, it has made profits. This bank has not declared any
dividend since the year 1949. This bank opened two branch offices in the
year 1958, one at Hyderabad and the other at Kothapeta. For the year 1956,
it made a net profit of Rs. 47,781, for the year 1957, it made a net profit of Rs.
51 319, for the year 1958, it made a net profit of Rs. 19,871, for the year
1959, it made a net profit of Rs. 32,225 and for the year 1960 it made a net
profit of Rs. 38,689. This bank has one office in Madras and its other offices
are in the State of Andhra Pradesh. It has one office in Area I, four offices in
Area II, four offices in Area III and seven offices in Area IV. The bank has
submitted that ever since 1953, the service conditions of the employees
were governed by the negotiated mutual agreements from time to time upto
31st December 1959. The bank in its written Statement has stated that it
was only from 1st January 1959 that as a result of the agreements, it was
almost on a par with the Sastry Award scales of pay and allowances. During
the year 1959 the bank employed 52 persons belonging to subordinate staff
and 68 persons belonging to clerical staff. The bank has prayed that the
existing terms and conditions of service may be permitted to continue under
negotiated agreement or otherwise till such time as a Commission of enquiry
took stock of the position of small banks as provided by the Bank Award
Commission in respect of D Class banks.
AI
BE
4.96. This bank was founded in the year 1920. As shown in the Statistical
Tables in the year 1959 its paid-up capital was Rs. 4,99,000 and in the year
1960 the same was Rs. 5,00,000, its reserves in the year 1959 were Rs.
1,59,000 and in the year 1960 were Rs. 1,87,000 and its deposits in the year
1959 were Rs. 91,58,000 and in the year 1960 were Rs. 1,15,94,000. Its
working funds for the year 1961 as given by the bank, amounted to Rs.
1,27,74,806. It had 18 branches including the head office in the year 1959
and 20 branches including the head office in the year 1960. It has 3 branches
in Area II, 3 branches in Area III and 14 branches in Area IV. It distributed a
dividend of 5.80 per cent subject to tax for the year 1959 and of 8 per cent
subject to tax for the year 1960. This bank was not before the Sastry Tribunal.
Its working funds for 2 years have exceeded Rs. 1 crore. If the Sastry Award
as modified was applicable to this bank it would have ceased to be in D
Class and would have gone to C-l Class. It is but fair that it should have some
relief before it adjusts itself so as to bring itself in line with other banks in C
Class under this Award.
4.95. This bank also has just emerged from D Class and it should have
a little time to adjust itself so as to be in line with other banks in C Class
under my award.
7,54,000. It has in all three offices out of which two are in Kerala State and
one in Madras State. All these offices are in Area IV. This bank has come up
before this Tribunal because it has one of its offices outside the State in
which its other offices are situated. It is a very small bank and it cannot bear
the burden of basic wages and dearness allowance for C Class banks. This
bank will be required to be placed in the Excepted List of banks if Class C is
to cover all banks with working funds below Rs. 7 crores.
54
4.100. This is a bank in the private sector and has been existing since
the year 1949 without distributing any dividend to its shareholders. No evidence
has been led on behalf of the bank showing any special circumstances peculiar
to the bank which had brought about such a result. It is, however, fair that this
bank should have some relief for some time if it is to be placed in Class C
55
before it could fall in line with other banks comprised in that Class.
net profit of Rs. 25,164 and that the Directors considered it advisable to write
off the pre-partition advances amounting to Rs. 2,98,988 as also Rs. 2,500
being reduction in capital effected by the company in respect of the banks
pre-partition investments in shares. It carried forward a loss of Rs. 1,59,261.
AI
4.103. This scheduled bank was incorporated in the year 1942. In the
year 1958, it had a paid-up capital of Rs. 18,88,000. The same was reduced
to Rs. 10,02,423 under an order of the Court, dated 2nd December 1958 on
the ground that a part of its share capital was not represented by any assets.
As shown by the Statistical Tables, its paid-up capital for the years 1959 and
1960 has been Rs. 10,02,000, it has no reserves and its deposits for the year
1959 were Rs. 20,96,000 whilst the same for the year 1960 were Rs.
20,94,000. It has filed a statement showing that for the year 1955, it suffered
a loss of Rs. 11,801, for the year 1956, it suffered a loss of Rs. 8,763, for the
year 1957, it suffered a loss of Rs. 5,078 and for the year 1958, it suffered a
loss of Rs. 5,57,779. From the Directors Report for the year ended 31st
December 1958, it appears that the banking transactions had resulted in a
profit of Rs. 21,411 but the Directors had considered it advisable to write off
bad debts amounting to Rs. 5,60,029. It is stated that a further sum of Rs.
19,160 was also written off and thereby the profit of Rs. 21,411 had been
converted into a loss of Rs. 5,57,778. In the Directors Report for the year
ended 31st December 1959, it has been stated that they had decided to
write off Rs. 10,640 as a pre-partition bad debt and Rs. 26,786 as loss on
pre-partition banking investments, and that the profit of Rs. 25,423 was thereby
converted into a net loss of Rs. 12,003. In the Directors Report for the year
1960, it is stated that the working of the bank for the year had resulted in a
56
BE
4.104. This bank has four branches including the head office, but excluding
purely administrative offices. This bank has not declared any dividends for 7
years. This bank was under moratorium for some time. The moratorium,
however, has been lifted. This bank is in the private sector and it is continuing
its existence without any distribution of dividends to the shareholders.
57
the paid-up capital of this bank for the years 1959 and 1960 was Rs. 38,000,
its reserves for the said years were Rs. 88,000 and its total deposits for the
year 1959 were Rs. 8,33,000 and for the year 1960 were Rs. 9,49.000. The
working funds of the bank as on 31st December 1960 and 3lst December
1961 as given by the bank were Rs. 11,11,895 and Rs. 11,22,323 respectively.
It made a profit of Rs. 15,000 in the year 1957, Rs. 11,000 in the year 1958,
Rs. 13,000 in the year 1959 and Rs. 15,000 in the year 1960. In the years
1957 and 1958, it declared a dividend of 8 per cent income tax free. In the
year 1959, it declared a dividend of 11 per cent taxable and in the year I960,
it declared a taxable dividend of 10 per cent. Out of the 12 persons employed
by this bank in the year I960, I belong to subordinate staff. It gives a basic
pay of Rs. 122 to its accountant with Rs. 25 as dearness allowance and Rs.
15 as special allowance making in all Rs. 162. In view of the smallness of its
resources and the smallness of the staff this bank needs to be placed in the
Excepted List of banks if Class D is to be abolished.
BE
4.110. This bank was not before the Sastry Tribunal. This scheduled
Bank was established in the year 1929. As shown in the Statistical Tables
its paid-up capital for the years 1959 and 1960 was Rs. 6,00,000, its reserves
for the aforesaid years were Rs, 6,20,000 and its deposits for the year 1959
were Rs. 80,35.000 and for the year 1960, were Rs. 82,66,000. Its workingfunds as on 31st December 1961, as shown by the bank, amounted to Rs.
95,00,000.
head office at Miraj, the provisions whereof had been subsequently extended
by a similar agreement to other branches of the bank. It was urged that this
settlement which was entered into and registered under the Bombay Industrial
Relations Act, 1946 was to remain in force and was binding on the parties
until it was terminated by two months notices by either party, and that as
such notice had not been served by the workmen on the Bank the said
agreement was legally binding on the workmen and there was no industrial
dispute so far as the bank was concerned and therefore, the Central
Government was not competent to make the reference. It is not necessary to
deal with this argument at any length. It is sufficient to point out that in any
view of the matter it is open to the Central Government to make a reference
even where no dispute actually exists between any particular bank and its
employees under the provisions contained in section 10(1)(5) which runs as
under :
AI
58
59
this bank became one of the banks having branches in more than one State
and has come up before this Tribunal. Trivandrum is in Area II and Martandam
is in Area IV.
AI
BE
4.118. This bank was not before the Sastry Tribunal: This bank was
established in the year 1908. As shown in the Statistical Tables it had a
paid-up capital of Rs. 1,99,000/- in 1957 which rose in the year 1960 to
Rs. 3.86000/-, its reserves were Rs. 1,19,000/- in 1957 which have gonedown to Rs 96.000/- in 1960, its total deposits for the year I960 were Rs.
43.39.000/ . Its working funds as on 31st December 1961 have been shown
by the Bank at Rs. 49,52,000. It made a net profit of Rs. 24.000/- in 1957,
Rs. 25.000/- in 1958, Rs. 18.000/- in 1959 and Rs. 35,000/- in 1960.
4.116. As shown in the Statistical Tables the paid-up capital of the bank
for the year 1959 was Rs. 1,32,000 and for the year 1960 was Rs. 1,40,000,
its reserves for the year 1959 were Rs. 9,000 and for the year 1960 were Rs.
10 000/- and its total deposits for the year 1959 were Rs. l,99,000/- which
came down to Rs. 1,85,000/- in the year 1960. Its working funds as on 31st
December, 1961 as given by the bank were Rs. 3,29,999/-. It made a net
profit of Rs. 4,229/- in the year 1957, of Rs. 718/- in the year 1958, of Rs.
3.149/- in the year 1959 and of Rs. 10.601/- in the year 1960. It has not
declared any dividend for the years 1958 to 1960. Its staff consists of 11
members excluding three officers. Its Secretary draws a salary of Rs. 110/-,
its agent at Martandam draws Rs. 105/- and its agent at Trivandrum draws
Rs. 85/-. Its senior clerk gets Rs. 95/- and the lowest clerk gets Rs. 65/-.
60
4.121. As regards the Bharatha Lakshmi Bank Ltd., the Indian Insurance
and Banking Corporation Ltd. and the Miraj State Bank Limited, they will be
going to Class C under my award. In my view, they are able or should be able
to bear the burden of my award as applicable to C Class banks. In order that
the change-over may be smooth, I am providing for some relief to these
61
the Reserve Bank of India to that effect. I give the same directions in connections
with the banking companies and corporations which are before me.
AI
BE
4.122. As regards the Chaldean Syrian Bank Ltd., the Gadodia Bank
Limited, the Jaya Lakshmi Bank Limited, and the Pangal Nayak Bank Ltd.,
as they have to bear the burden of a bank in the higher class, they are
entitled to some relief for some time before they fall in line with other banks
falling within Class C under my award and I am providing for such relief in
other parts of this award.
62
4.128. Under this award banks have been classified into 3 classes (1)
Class A : banks with working funds amounting to Rs. 25 crores and above
and all Exchange Banks.
63
(2) Class B : banks with working funds amounting to Rs. 7 crores and
above but less than Rs. 25 crores and (3) Class C : banks with working funds
below Rs. 7 crores.
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
(12)
(13)
Classes A and B under this award are the same as Classes A and B
under the Sastry Award. As regards Class C under this award, the same
comprises banks falling within Class C and Class D under the Sastry Award.
It is necessary for me to classify banks which are at present effectively
before me. In order to maintain continuity, I have, out of the banks which are
before me, included in Class A, Class B and Class C such banks as at
present would fall within Class A, Class B and Class C respectively under
the Sastry Award. I direct that for the purpose of considering hereafter whether
a bank has gone to a higher class or to a lower class the working funds of the
bank calculated on the basis aforesaid as on 31st December, 1960 should
also be taken into consideration.
Class C will comprise the following 26 banks and the 6 banks in the
Excepted List:
BE
AI
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
(12)
(13)
(14)
(15)
(16)
(17)
(18)
(19)
(20)
(21)
(22)
(23)
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
(12)
(13)
(14)
(15)
(16)
(17)
(18)
(19)
(20)
(21)
(22)
(23)
(24)
(25)
(26)
64
65
(5)
(6)
AI
BE
4.131. The Sen Tribunal divided the country into three areas for the
purpose, of fixing wages in the banking industry. In Class I area it included
the City of Calcutta including Howrah, Barrackpore, Behala, Alipore, Cossi
pore, Garden Reach, Baranagore, Tollygunge, the South Suburban Municipal
area and Dum Dum, Bombay including the areas covered by Greater Bombay,
the Cities of Delhi and Ahmedabad. In Class II area it included all towns and
cities (other than those included in Class I area) shown in the census report
of 1941 as possessing populations of 50,000 or more in the Punjab and
1,00,000 or more elsewhere and in Class III area it included all places not
included in areas of classes I and II.
66
67
4.137. Government by its order, dated 24th August 1954 directed that
instead of the classification of the country into three areas as adopted in the
Sastry Award, it should be divided into four areas. Class I area and Class II
area were the same as provided by the Sastry Award. Class III area as to
comprise all towns and cities not included in Class I and Class II areas and
which according to the Census Report of 1951 contained a population of
more than thirty thousand. Class IV area was for the first time created
comprising all places not already included in Class I, Class II and Class III
areas. Even out of this Class IV area were carved out for special treatment
areas situated in the former Indian States i.e. in Part B States and in Part C
States, other than Delhi, Ajmer and Coorg which have been referred to by the
Bank Award Commission as Class V area.
BE
under the Labour Appellate Tribunal decision, it would be found that 220
offices may probably be converted into losing offices out of a total of 2,317
profit-earning offices at the end of 1956 and of them, 50 would be in area 4
and 26 in area 5. It has observed that viewed against the background of the
net reduction in the number of offices in the post-war period, the number of
offices (220) that may have to be closed by the end of 1956 (assuming that
all the offices converted thereby into loss-incurring offices would necessarily
be closed) did not appear to be so large as to cause any alarm. It has further
stated that from the information collected from banks regarding individual
offices that may have to be closed during the next 3 years as a result of the
burden imposed by the Labour Appellate Tribunal decision, it would appear
that in all 47 places were expected to be deprived of banking facilities. Of
these as many as 24 were in area 4 and 18 in area 5 and that while a majority
of the offices in area 4 were served by B and C Classes of banks, all offices
in area 5 were served by B and C Classes of banks alone. The Commission
further stated that prima facie there appeared to be a case for providing a
relief in the provisions of the Labour Appellate Tribunal decision as far as they
applied to these areas. The Commission observed that the major importance
of developing these smaller areas could hardly be exaggerated. In paragraph
146 of the report of the Bank Award Commission, it is stated that since in our
country the number of places with a population of less than 25,000
predominates, the need for further development of banking in smaller places
is apparent. In the same paragraph the Commission has observed as follows:-
AI
68
A reference has been made by the Commission to the findings of the Rural
Banking Enquiry Committee appointed by the Government of India in 1949
and to the All India Rural Credit Survey during the years 1951 - 1953 conducted
by the Reserve Bank of India and also to the recommendations of the Rural
Banking Enquiry Committee for the exclusion of semi-urban and rural offices
of banks in towns having a population of less than 50,000 from the operation
of the Shops and Establishments Act and the awards of Industrial Tribunals.
Reference has also been made to the recommendation of the Rural Banking
Enquiry Committee as regards the special role played by the Imperial Bank
of India in connection with the opening of offices at semi-urban and rural
centres in Part A and Part C States and the role to be played by the Cooperative banks in this connection, and the statement made by the Imperial
Bank in May 1954 to the Reserve Bank that if the Labour Appellate Tribunal
decision was given effect to, the Imperial Bank would find it extremely difficult
69
area 5 for a maximum period of two years from the date of the announcement
of the Governments final decision on the report of a special commission
which was recommended to be appointed for dealing with the special problems
of banks situated in Travancore Cochin State. The Government did appoint a
special commission as recommended by the Bank Award Commission to
examine the problems of banks situated in Travancore Cochin State. The
said Commission has made its report. Now there is no exempted area like
area 5 in which the award of the Sastry Tribunal as modified does not operate.
4.139. It has been observed in paragraph 156 of the report of the Bank
Award Commission that out of 56,106 workmen (both clerks and subordinates)
of the reporting banks in all classes, 4,092 or 7.29 per cent were accounted
for by offices in area IV. The Bank Award Commission in its report has observed
at the end of paragraph 159 as follows :
BE
In paragraph 160 it has stated that even on the merits much could be
said in favour of the creation of area 4. It is further observed that the division
of the country into three banking areas has apparently resulted in the anomaly
of including in area 3 places which cannot claim to be similar in material
particulars. The Commission apprehended that it would not be unreasonable
to assume that the cost of living in places where the population was 30,000
or less would not be the same as in places where the population was a lakh
or above 30,000. After examining the difficulty in drawing a line somewhere,
the Commission has observed as follows :
4.141. The All India Bank Employees Association has strongly contended
that the areawise classification should be completely abolished. It contends
that there is no scientific basis for holding that the cost of living varies according
to the size of the population in a given area. It referred to several places
situated in lower areas where the prices of essential commodities like food
and clothing were higher than those in places situated in higher areas. It has
urged that there is no remarkable difference in prices prevailing at places
which are situated in lower areas and at other places which fall within higher
areas; that as a matter of fact the prices of cloth were higher at places far
away from the place of manufacture than in cities where cloth was
manufactured; that in some of the project areas the cost of housing and
transport was high and that in less populated places where cheaper houses
were available, the accomodation was substandard.
If, by creating area 4 and fixing for this area a lower wage structure,
commercial banks are likely to spread out in rural areas, it would, I
think, be worthwhile giving commercial banks the necessary facilities
in that behalf. That is one aspect of the matter.
AI
70
4.142. As regards food, it has been pointed out that rural areas are not
Self-sufficient areas so that food may be available at cheap rates. It is pleaded
that the classification of areas based on population of or fixing scales of
wages was irrational and unscientific and gave rise to many anomalies,that
this classification was only of recent origin, that it was not based on any
scientific data that the Central Government, the State Governments, the postal
authorities, the Railway authorities, the Reserve Bank of India and the Life
Insurance Corporation do not have different scales of pay for their employees
according to the areas in which they are employed, that even so far as banks
themselves are concerned, the non-workmen staff, etc., do not have scales
of pay based on areawise classification and that there was no justification in
prescribing different scales of pay in the same institution in its different offices
for the same category of employees. It is pointed out that costlier places
where large amounts were required to be spent on housing and transport and
other conveniences can be suitably dealt with by providing for local allowances
and house rent allowances.
4.143. The All India Bank Employees Federation has also equally been
critical of the present classification and has opposed it. It has pleaded that
on account of rapid rise in the cost of living throughout the country, the
differences in the cost of living in different areas have been substantially
eliminated, that the cost of living does not merely depend, on the population
of different centres but it also depends on the vicinity of the places and many
other factors like scarcity and non-availability of the daily requirements and
71
4.144. The Vadodra Rajya Bank Nokar Sangh and the Surat Bank
Employees Union, Surat have made a similar demand. The All India State
Bank of India Staff Federation has pleaded that prior to the Sen-Award there
were uniform wage scales with additional house rent allowance for Bombay,
Calcutta and Delhi, that the areawise classification of branches had created
a source of deep discontent among the employees and that the area-wise
classification was not just or legal or proper or otherwise expedient and that
the said classification should be abolished as being opposed to Article 37(2)
of the Constitution providing for equal pay for equal work. The State Bank of
India Staff Union, Andhra Pradesh, Vijayawada, and Madras Circle have made
a similar demand.
AI
BE
transport difficulties, etc. and that the principle of equal pay for equal work
should be accepted in case of the banking industry since the nature of work
of their employees is substantially the same irrespective of the size of the
banks or the place where they are situated. It has submitted that the scales
of pay to be prescribed for the banks should be uniform for all banks in all
areas and a difference, if any, on account of special features of any particular
place or places should be compensated by means of special allowances.
4.146. The All India Bank of Baroda Employees Federation, South Gujarat
Bank of Baroda Employees Union, Indian Overseas Bank Employees Union,
Madras, Employees Association of the Union Bank of Bijapur and Sholapur,
Behar Provincial Central Bank of India Employees Association, United
Commercial Bank Employees Association, Agartala, Central Bank of India
Employees Association, Patna; Cochin Commercial Bank Employees
72
73
set up, that any attempt to evolve a uniform scale of pay would involve a
complete revision entailing bringing down the higher to a lower base, that it
was denied that the fixation of areas in accordance with population was
irrational or arbitrary or that the classification was unjust or discriminatory or
bred frustration or dissatisfaction. The State Bank of India denied that the
classification was a device to deprive employees of any dues. The State
Bank of India has also pleaded that the areawise classification was a realistic
one. It has submitted that Article 37 of the Constitution had no application
and, that in any event, the areawise classification did not run counter to the
provisions of such Article and was reasonable and correct.
Area 2 Cities having population of more than 5 lakhs but less than 10
lakhs.
Area 3 Places having population of 1 lakh and above but less than 5
lakhs.
Area 4 Places having population of 30,000 and above but less than 1
lakh.
Area 5 Rural areas having population of less than 30,000.
The Miraj State Bank Ltd. has pleaded that as far as the areawise division is
concerned, the places with populations of less than one lac should be subdivided into two classes, and places with a population of 20,000 should be
placed in a separate class. The Travancore Cochin Bankers Association,
the Kerala Bankers Association, the Catholic Syrian Bank Ltd., the Gadodia
Bank Ltd. and the Jaya Laxmi Bank Ltd. have also opposed the demand of
the workmen for the abolition of areawise classification.
4.153. Shri Sule, the learned Advocate on behalf of the All India Bank
Employees Association, in the course of the hearing, very strongly urged
that there should not be a division of banks on the basis of areas and demanded
the abolition of the concept of areas. He stated that prior to all-India adjudication
of the disputes in the Banking industry the question of dividing the banks into
different areas never arose and the banks of their own accord were giving
more or less uniform wages wherever they were stationed, and that the State
Industrial Tribunals had prescribed uniform scales of pay by their awards for
all places. He submitted that the rise in prices in the cities and what are
called country side areas was such that now very little difference existed in
the prices of necessary commodities, that population has nothing to do with
the cost of living as the prices of commodities depend on the availability of
market and facility of transport and that a large number of what are known as
rural areas or countryside areas are being speedily urbanised because of the
development of the Community Projects. He has pointed out that, there is an
increase in railway milage as a result of new lines being put, that inland
transport by the State Transport authorities is being developed, that
industrialisation is taking place very speedily and that the expansion of
branches of the State Bank and its Subsidiaries had itself added to the
urbanisation of the countryside. Shri Sule submitted that in rural areas the
rise in prices was much more than in the cities due to urbanisation, that the
city price fluctuations were reflected in such areas and that the self-sufficiency
in the economy of villages has gone away.
AI
BE
4.151. The Northern India Banks Association has pleaded that under
the Sastry Award, the classification of areas was rightly decided upon in view
of the fact that in smaller towns prices of food stuffs, house accommodation
and other expenses were much below those obtaining in bigger towns; moreover
the problem of transportation in such places did not exist. The Association
has further pleaded that as banking still needed to be extended to smaller
towns in the country, it would be desirable both in the interest of the country
and bank employees themselves, to accept lower scale of emoluments for
smaller towns so that industry may continue to expand and develop that
fixing a uniform basic pay would deprive smaller towns of banking facilities
and also reduce the total employment potential in the industry and that areas
according to the population as per the Sastry Award as modified should
continue to be classed into I II, III and IV as the programme of the expansion
of banks could be successfully carried out only on the basis of paying capacity
of each branch working in a particular area.
4.150. The eight Subsidiary banks of the State Bank of India supported
the present areawise classification. The State Bank of Patiala denied that
the areawise classification was discriminatory or that it was equitable, fair or
reasonable to have one uniform grade in all areas with compensatory local
allowance for big cities.
4.152. The National Bank of Lahore Ltd. has characterised the demand
made in this connection by the All India Bank Employees Association as a
baseless demand and has stated that the demand that a bank employee
working in a rural area where the cost of living is radically lower than that of
the metropolis or big Presidency towns should be paid at the same rate as
his counterpart in such big towns, was unreasonable, illogical, unjust and
unwarranted. It has stated that the classification of areas was necessary in
the very nature of the industry. The Bharatha Lakshmi Bank has stated that
rural banking was being developed by small banks only till recently and that
this could best be done by small D class banks and has suggested the
following classification of areas :
Area 1 Large cities like Bombay, Calcutta, Delhi, Madras with
population of 10 lakhs and over.
74
4.154. Shri Dudhia, the learned Advocate on behalf of the All India Bank
Employees Federation, supported Shri Sule and added that population was
not the only test for classification of areas, but nearness to the industrial
towns or cities should also be considered as a factor which would affect the
cost of living of the other neighbouring places. He cited the example of Thana
and Kalyan and stated that they were as highly expensive as Bombay. He
75
submitted that the areawise classification for scales of pay was anomalous
and unjust.
That Tribunal has quoted the views of the first Central Pay Commission
which were cited with approval by the Dearness Allowance Committee, known
as the Gadgil Committee. The views of the first Central Pay Commission
were as follows :
AI
BE
4.156. Shri Jyoti Ghosh, who appeared on behalf of the State Bank of
India Employees Association (Bengal Circle), drew a lurid picture of the various
hardships which were undergone by persons when they were transferred to
lower areas. He said that medicines, like pennicilin and other antibiotics
which have become an essential part of the modern medical treatment
were not available, that there were no hospital facilities and that there were
no proper markets where they could buy goods. There were no educational
facilities and the employees have often to leave their families when they were
asked to do the work of the nation when branches of the State Bank of India
were opened in some urban, rural and project areas. He pointed out that
branches have been opened by the State Bank of India at Durgapur, Asansol,
Burnpur, Bhilai and Rourkela. Durgapur is in Area IV and this place is now
called the Ruhr of India. As regards Durgapur, Asansol and Burnpur, he
stated that these places have become mining centres and centres of steel
projects, that there were other factories situated there which were
manufacturing glass, cycles, cables etc. and that these places have become
extremely costly places. He complained that the transfer of the staff to these
new areas has become an instrument of punishment in the hands of the
employers. The employees, apart from their objection to the areawise
classification, were opposed to the principle of such classification, on the
ground that it offened against the principle of equal pay for equal work. He
further contended that the work in the branches was of a pioneering nature,
that the strength of the staff was limited, that they had to do work of various
types and had to put longer hours of work and that there was no reason why
they should be paid less at more disagreeable places of work. He emphasised
that the concept of cheaper living in villages was a myth and stated that the
suggestion that workmen in the rural areas should be paid less because they
4.155. A strong case was sought to be made out by the All India State
Bank of India Staff Federation and the State Bank of India Staff Union, Andhra
Pradesh, for abolition of areawise classification. It was urged that the State
Bank of India belonged to the public sector, that 92 per cent of its shares
were held by the Reserve Bank of India in respect of whose employees there
was no areawise classification, in respect of other Corporations in the public
sector like the Life Insurance Corporation of India, that in the Central
Government service including Railways and Posts and Telegraphs there was
no such areawise classification, that the transfer of an employee from a
higher area to a lower area was itself a hardship inasmuch as there were no
comparable educational facilities and amenities available in lower areas and
that further hardship should not be inflicted on the employees in the shape of
reduced emoluments. They further pointed out that so far as the members of
the supervisory staff were concerned, there was no such areawise
classification.
have other resources to fall back upon, was in theory untenable and in practice
unsound. It was pointed out that when new branches of the bank were opened,
experienced hands were required to be sent for the purpose of opening such
branches and carry on the work so as to gather the confidence of the public
and win its support and induce it to make deposits at such newly opened
branches, there was no reason why they should be prejudicially affected by
reason of such transfer.
76
Whatever might have been the position in the past, conditions existing
today do not justify the view that the cost of living differs very much
between one part of India and another, apart from particular cities.
But it seems to be true that by a continued tradition, standards of
living are much lower in certain parts of the country than elsewhere.
4.158. Several exhibits were filed before me in order to show that the
prices at same places in lower areas were higher than the prices prevailing in
other places in higher areas.
4.159. As against these arguments, it was urged by Shri Phadke on
behalf of the Indian Banks Association that since the date of the Sastry
Award as modified no material change in circumstances had taken place
which would warrant making any change therein as regards areawise
classification. It was urged that the legislature of the land itself had thought it
fit to give a statutory recognition to the fourfold areawise classification and to
provide for its continuance for a period of five years and that unless a very
strong case was made out for a change therein, no ground existed for disturbing
the same.
4.160. In the case of Burn and Company Ltd. and their employees,
reported in 1957 (1) Labour Law Journal page 226 the Supreme Court has
considered the argument advanced in that case that the Appellate Tribunal In
77
78
S.
No.
79
39
29
3
11
2
1
17
24
13
4
2
105
11
15
17
1
1
1
1
1
12
15
10
1
1
1
6
2
1
5
2
1
9
7
7
1
3
3
2
1
4
2
1
2
1
1
1
2
4
13
Total
2
8
14
1
3
5
46
1
2
2
13
2
8
7
1
7
1
7
12
16
33
1
1
2
8
Total
49
4
3
9
6
24
114
4
28
1
1
2
1
1
1
1
7
2
2
13
1
4
2
2
1
2
1
1
2
24
4
4
12
22
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
4
1
1
1
5
2
6
2
2
2
3
2
25
1
1
5
2
2
14
2
4
4
1
11
68
1
10
3
1
6
2
6
AI
BE
Statement showing the number of branches opened and closed in area IV by 12 A Class banks during 1947 to I953 and 1954 to 1960.
that case was in error in brushing aside the previous award and in deciding
the matter afresh, as if it arose for the first time for determination. It has also
considered the argument that when once a dispute was referred to a Tribunal
and had resulted in an adjudication, such adjudication must be taken as
binding on the parties thereto, unless there was a change of circumstances.
The Appellate Tribunal in that case had considered that the rule that a previous
adjudication was binding on the parties unless there was a change of
circumstances was a rule of prudence and not of law. The Supreme Court in
that case has expressed itself at page 230 in terms following :-
employer from which to pay, the tempo of work in lower areas affecting the
rate of wages and the character of the work in lower areas whether it is
intermittent and seasonal involving less strain. He emphasized that if existing
arrangement was to be scrapped, then the only alternative appeared to be
the industry-cum-region basis with different grades of pay, different rates of
dearness allowance and different emoluments in different regions. He
submitted that the existing arrangements were fair and more reliable.
4.161. In the case of the Indian General Navigation and Railway Company
Ltd. and others and their workmen reported in 1960(1) Labour Law journal at
page 561, the Supreme Court has observed at page 562 as under:
4.164. There are wide variations in the type of diet taken in various parts
of the country. There is a wide divergence in the type of clothing that is worn.
The consumption pattern throughout the country is not the same. The nature
and quality of work at all places is not the same. The tempo of work is
different at different places and is different at different times of the year. The
question that has really to be considered is whether there is any principle
better than the one laid down by the previous Tribunals for the purpose of
classification.
4.165 In paragraph 25 of its report, the Bank Award Commission has
observed that in the awards of all-India Tribunals there was a considerable
degree of similarity in approach to the problems involved in or arising from the
subject matter of adjudication though there have been differences in detail. It
has further observed that as regards the basic approach to the problems it
was agreed that the existing pattern of banking structure in the country did
not permit of the fixation of a single scale of pay for employees of all banks
and, therefore, a classification of banks according to their resources (inasmuch
as this factor was Indicative of concerns capacity to pay) was essential and
that the differences in the cost of living in various parts of the country
necessitated its division into certain specified areas as it would not be correct
to suggest the same scale of emoluments for expensive places like Bombay
or Calcutta as for comparatively cheaper centres.
AI
BE
Apart from the fact that s. 19(6) of the Industrial Disputes Act itself
contemplates that the award cannot be binding after it is terminated
and therefore the principle of res Judicata should be applied with
caution in industrial disputes which relate to such matters as wages
and dearness allowance, there can be no doubt that if circumstances
have changed there is a good case for a change in the award.
80
4.166. Apart from the abolition of areas, no alternative basis has been
suggested for the purpose of classification of different places in the country.
The principle of industry-cum-region basis which has usually been applied by
Industrial Tribunals is not one which could be applied to an industry like
banking where most of the large banks have branches throughout the country.
The region-wise approach was considered and dropped by previous Tribunals
in dealing with the industry of banking. Being left with no better formula and
being faced with the differences in the cost of living and standards of living in
different parts of the country, the previous Tribunals had no other alternative
left to them but to resort to the classification of areas according to the
population. The same difficulty again presents itself before me.
4.167. I will first consider whether there is any case made out for a
complete abolition of the areawise classification. The existence of anomalies
to which pointed reference has been made by various representatives of the
employees, do not by themselves create a case for abolition of this
81
4.169. A claim has been made that the City of Bangalore should also be
included in Area I. It was pointed out that the population of Metropolitan
Bangalore, comprising (a) areas falling within the Bangalore Corporation limits
(b) area notified under the Bangalore City Improvement Trust Board Act,
excluding Satellite townships and (c) Satellite towns within the Trust Board
area, is already above 12 lakhs according to the provisional official population
figures of 1961 Census. Bangalore is now the capital of the enlarged State of
Mysore. It is a highly developed industrial area and it would be in the fitness
of things if the City of Bangalore including the areas mentioned above is also
included in Area I, and I direct accordingly. The case of other places having a
population of less than 12 lakhs for inclusion in this area has been separately
dealt with later.
AI
BE
82
4.170. As regards Area II. it would comprise all cities and towns other
than those included in Area I, having a population of one lakh and above but
below 12 lakhs according to the 1961 population Census figures. The case of
some places with a population of less than one lakh for inclusion in this Area
has been separately dealt with later.
4.171. Then comes the important question relating to Area III. Arguments
at considerable length have been advanced in respect of the limits of
population for this area. Under the award of the Sastry Tribunal, all places
other than those comprised in Class I area and Class II area have been
included in Area III. Government desired that out of this Area III should be
carved out Area IV comprising places with a population of 30,000 and under.
In fact, the Central Government made an application before the Labour
Appellate Tribunal for being joined as a party and for being heard in support of
the application that banks in rural and semi-urban areas having a population
of and below 30,000 should be excluded from the scope of the award for a
period of two years in the case of existing branches and offices and for a
period of four years in the case of new ones. Government relied upon the
report of the Rural Banking Enquiry Committee, which had recommended an
exemption of places having a population of 50,000 and below from the operation
of the awards of Industrial Tribunals. On a preliminary objection being raised
by the counsel for the employees that such an application did not lie as none
83
4.174. So far as the commercial banks (other than the State Bank of
India and its Subsidiaries) are concerned, there is no case for retention of
Area IV. The number of employees in branches in Area IV is comparatively
small. The Indian Banks Association has filed a statement showing the number
of banking offices (including Head Office) and the number of employees
(clerical and subordinate staff) employed therein areawise of its member
banks as on 31st December 1959. It shows that its 37 member banks had
451 offices in Area I, 641 offices in Area II,.623 offices in Area III and 703
offices in Area IV. The 703 offices in Area IV consisted of 320 offices of A
Class banks, 262 offices of B Class banks and 121 offices of C class banks.
The statement further shows that out of 49,962 employees employed in all
areas, 5,924 employees (3322 clerks and 2,602 members of the subordinate
staff) were employed in Area IV. The amount of saving made by commercial
banks by paying less to their employees in these branches in Area IV is not
such as would induce them to open more branches in this area. When new
branches have to be opened, experienced employees have to be sent for the
purpose of manning those branches. There is considerable discontent among
the employees of the banks in connection with the economic detriment which
they suffer when they are transferred to branches in lower areas. A strong
complaint has been made that apart from the hardship which they have to
undergo by reason of such transfers owing to inadequate social amenities
and inadequate educational and medical facilities etc., they have to suffer an
economic deteriment and that this gives rise to a feeling that these transfers
operate by way of penalty. The workmen as a rule have been opposed to
such transfers and the State Bank of India had to provide additional benefits
to supplement the provisions of the Sastry Award as modified in order to
minimise the hardships inherent in the scheme of transfer from a higher to a
lower area.
AI
BE
of the banks had raised the issue directly by their appeals, the application
was not entertained for technical reasons. Government thereafter issued the
modification order dated 24th August 1954.
84
85
other sources from which they could supplement their income. I do not think
that it is right that the other sources of income of persons who may be
employed in a bank should be taken into account when a Tribunal is called
upon to fix the scales of pay for employees of banks.
(1) losses in excess of such yearly sum as may be agreed upon between
the Reserve Bank and the State Bank and attributable to the branches
established in pursuance of sub-section (5) of section 16, which
lays down that not less than 400 new branches were required to be
opened by the State Bank within five years of the date when the Act
came into force or such extended period as the Central Government
may specify in that behalf.
AI
BE
4.178. I shall next deal with the case of the State Bank of India and its
subsidiaries in this connection. Shri Sachin Chaudhary, who appeared for
the State Bank of India made a forceful submission for the retention of Area
IV. He stated that the State Bank of India was charged within the function of
opening new branches and that it had taken upon itself the burden of opening
not less than 400 branches within a period of 5 years. On 31st December,
1959 it had in the clerical grade 4,039 employees employed in 37 branches
in Area I, 4,008 employees employed in 105 branches in Area II, 3,214
employees employed in 201 branches in Area III and 2,517 employees
employed in 480 branches in Area IV making in all 13,778 employees in 823
branches. On the same day in the subordinate grade it had 1,442 employees
in Area I, 1,729 employees in Area II, 1,832 employees in Area III and 1,748
employees in Area IV making a total of 6,751. Thus out of a total number of
20,529 employees, 4,265 were employed in Area IV. Between 1st July 1955
and 30th June 1960 the State Bank of India has opened 327 branches in
Area IV and 75 branches in Area III. As on 30th September 1961, the State
Bank of India had 34 branches in Area I, 100 branches in Area II, 194 branches
in Area III and 461 branches in Area IV. According to the State Bank of India,
298 branches in Area IV and 55 branches in Area III opened as aforesaid upto
30th June, 1960 were working at a loss. There is no doubt that the State
Bank of India has a large number of employees employed in Area IV and is
doing considerable pioneering work. It has to fulfil the national policy for the
development of banking in semi-urban and rural areas as other commercial
banks were not able to satisfy that want. The major burden in this connection
has fallen on the State Bank of India and its Subsidiaries and on the Cooperative banks.
The question that I have to consider is whether this
pioneering work should be done at the expense of the workmen. For the
4.179 Section 36 of the State Bank .of India Act, 1955, provides for the
creation of the Integration and Development Fund. The said fund is made up
of the dividends payable to the Reserve Bank on such shares of the State
Bank held by it as do not exceed fiftyfive per cent of the total issued capital
and such contribution as the Reserve Bank or the Central Government may
make from time to time. The said Fund is required to be applied exclusively
for meeting:
86
(2) subsidies granted by the State Bank to a subsidiary bank with the
approval of the Reserve Bank, and
(3) such other losses or expenditure as may be approved by the Central
Government in consultation with the Reserve Bank.
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
...
...
...
...
...
TOTAL
Amount
credited
Rs.
24,75,000
49,50,000
74,25,000
55,68,750
61,87,500
Amount
withdrawn
Rs.
35,31,909
32,94,654
Balance.
Rs.
24,75,000
74,25,000
1,48,50,000
1,68,86,841
1,97,79,687
2,66,06,250
68,26,563
1,97,79,687
The whole of this Integration Fund has been built up out of the dividend
income. The only amounts withdrawn from this fund were Rs. 35,31.909 in
87
It is found from the statement furnished by the State Bank of India itself
that out of 8 new branches opened by it in Area I during 1st July 1955 to 30th
June, 1960, 5 have made losses and 3 only have made profits that out of 6
branches opened during the said period in Area II, 5 have made losses and
only 1 has made profit, that out of the 75 branches opened during this period
in Area III, 55 branches have made losses and only 20 have made profits and
that out of 327 branches opened in Area IV, 298 branches have made losses
and only 29 branches have made profits.
There is no evidence led before me to show that the branches in Area IV are
perenially to make losses. When these uneconomic branches are opened in
the larger interests of the national economy of the country during the five year
plan periods, the workmens interests have also to be looked at. The Directive
Principles of State Policy require that the wages of workmen cannot be very
low. The State Bank of India is yielding enormous profits and special areas
cannot be maintained for long where it can pay low wages. The creation of
Area IV has given rise to considerable discontent and has agitated the minds
of workmen to a considerable extent. The workmen of the State Bank of India
even at the interim relief stage sought the abolition of Area IV by way of what
they termed interim relief. In my view, it is necessary in the larger interests
of the country for securing peace in the industry and doing justice to the
claims of the workmen, that Area IV should not be retained so far as the
State Bank of India is concerned.
AI
BE
4.180. When branches have been newly opened, they may incur losses
for some time. What may be considered is whether after the branches get
established for some time they are likely to make profits or losses. The State
Bank of India has opened several new branches at places where the
Government had previously pay offices and treasury pay offices. The non
workmen staff of the State Bank of India is not paid any lower salary by
reason of the fact that such staff is employed in a lower area. The lesser
scales of pay are claimed only in respect of workmen employed in the lower
area. Inspite of the opening of numerous branches and the losses sustained
therein the State Bank of India has been making progressively larger profits
year by year. Its net profits for the year 1955 amounted to Rs.1,35,93,000/for the year 195 6 amounted to Rs. 1,56,18,000/- for the year 1957, amounted
to Rs. 1,87,56,000/-, for the year 1958 amounted to Rs.1,90,14,000 /- for the
year 1959 amounted to Rs. 1,87,10,000/- and for the year 1960 amounted to
Rs. 2,17,59,000/-. In view of the sound financial condition of the bank, there
is no reason why the bank should pay law wages in Area IV. The new branches
have been opened inter alia with a view to facilitate Government business,
with a view to providing banking facilities to fast developing areas, with a view
to develop rural economy and with a view to secure deposits and to mop up
the resources or the country side in the larger interest of the nation. The
Chairman of the State Bank of India in his speech at the 6th annual general
meeting of the shareholders held at Bombay has in connection with the
policy underlying the opening of branches stated as under :
the year 1959 in respect of the losses incurred for the year 1957 amounting
to Rs. 8,94,821 and the losses incurred for the year 1958 amounting to Rs.
26,37,088 and the sum of Rs. 32,94,654 in the year 1960 in respect of the
losses incurred for the year 1959 on account of new branches. The State
Bank of India has tried to show that various branches in Area IV have incurred
losses.
88
4.181. As regards the eight Subsidiaries of the State Bank of India, they have
a large number of offices in Area IV. Out of the 506 offices of these banks,
325 are in Area IV, 79 are in Area III, 77 are in Area II and 25 are in Area I, as
at the end of 30th June 1961. There is no area-wise classification so far as
the State Bank of Saurashtra and the State Bank of Patiala are concerned
and the same scales of pay etc. are applicable to employees at places
falling in Area III and in Area IV. As regards the State Bank of Bikaner, as a
result of an agreement arrived at with the employees representatives before
the Bank Award Commission, the dearness allowance paid to the employees
in Area IV is at the same rate as in Area III. Four of its branches situated at
Abohar, Ratangarh, Sardarshahr and Sujangarh which fall in Area IV have
been upgraded to Area III. As regards the State Bank of Mysore, in the case
of clerical staff (inclusive of cash department staff) in Area III and IV basic pay
scale of Area II has been extended, while deamess allowance to clerical staff
in Areas I, II and III is being paid in terms of the Award, separate scales of
dearness allowance have been provided for them in Area IV. The State Bank
of Indore also has granted certain improvements to employees in class IV
Areas. According to the recommendations of the Sub-Committee for the
expansion of branches appointed by the State Bank of India, the Subsidiary
banks have to join the State Bank of India in opening 300 new branches at
places to be selected from rural and semi-urban areas. Out of the 325 branches
of the Subsidiaries of the State Bank of India in Area IV, 44 branches have
been opened in the year 1960. Some of these branches are likely to make
losses. It is difficult to provide for the development of banking in rural areas at
89
years 1958, 1959 and 1960 were Rs. 8,54,000, Rs. 9,13,000 and Rs. 10,51,803
respectively. The bank made a net profit of Rs. 10,24,000 for the year 1958,
Rs. 9,95,000 for the year 1959 and Rs. 13,53,364 for the year 1960. On
shares of the State Bank of Mysore and 75:84 per cent shares of the State
Bank of Hyderabad, the State Bank of Patiala and the State Bank of Saurashtra,
96.70 per cent shares of the State Bank of Bikaner, 82.82 per cent shares of
the State Bank of Indore, 88.11 per cent shares of the State Bank of Jaipur,
62.27 per cent shares of the State Bank of Mysore and 75.84 per cent shares
of the State Bank of Travancore. In connection with some of these banks the
percentage is likely to be reduced as claims from all the shareholders of the
pre-existing corresponding banks had not been received.
4.182. The Subsidiaries of the Stale Bank of India can bear the additional
burden imposed by the abolition of Area IV. The Government has very wisely
constituted the Integration and Development Fund for meeting the losses
which these banks may suffer in opening branches in semi-urban and rural
areas in the larger interest of the nation. The State Bank of Hyderabad is
even at present conferring larger benefits than those provided In the Sastry
Award to employees who are transferred from a higher area to a lower area.
Whereas the award provides that in case of transfer from a higher area to a
lower area basic pay of the employee concerned should be protected, but
allowances such as dearness. and house rent should be reduced in accordance
with the scale applicable to the lower area, the management agreed to protect
the basic salary and all allowances drawn by the employees while at higher
area, for the first 12 months of their posting to lower area and thereafter to
pay compensatory allowance to cover the difference until it is wiped off in due
course by the increments earned in future.
AI
BE
90
4.183. Some of the reasons given for the abolition of Area IV in connection
with the State Bank of India equally apply to its Subsidiaries. Taking
every circumstance into account, I am of the view that these banks should
also fall in line with the remaining banks in the country in connection with
Area IV. In my view, Area IV needs to be abolished.
4.184. The difference in the total remuneration payable by A, B, and C
Class banks under the Sastry Award as modified to the clerical staff and the
members of the subordinate staff in Area III and in Area IV is very large. At
the all-India working class consumer price index No. 123 (Base 1949 = 100)
an A Class bank pays in the 1st year of service to a member of the clerical
staff in Area III Rs. 127.25, whilst in Area IV it pays Rs. 99.90. The
corresponding figures for a B Class bank are in Area III Rs. 120.25 and Area
IV Rs. 90.90. The corresponding figures for a C Class bank are in Area III Rs.
114.25 and in Area IV Rs. 87.90. As regards members of the subordinate
staff the corresponding figures for A Class banks are in Area III Rs. 80.87 and
in Area IV Rs. 65.25; for B Class banks are in Area III Rs. 75.75 and in Area
IV Rs. 57; and for C Class banks are in Area I I I Rs. 70.62 and in Area IV Rs.
42.50. The difference will be further accentuated if the total remuneration
91
4.187. There are two places in Area III which it is claimed, should be
placed in Area I. They are Kalyan and Thana. According to the latest census
figures, the population of Thana has crossed the limit of one lac and would,
apart from any other circumstance, be regarded as falling in Area II. Both
Kalyan and Thana are on the outskirts of Greater Bombay. Local trains run
frequently from Bombay to Thana and Bombay to Kalyan. Both are industrial
centres. The State Bank of India has treated these places as if they fell in
Area I. Having regard to the peculiar circumstances in connection with these
two places, it is but just that these two places should be regarded as falling
within Area I, and I direct accordingly.
4.188. There are various places in Area III which, by reason of the peculiar
position occupied by those places, are required by workmen to be upgraded
as if those places fell in Area II. A claim has been made that Chandigarh,
Chandernagore, Chinsurah, Cochin, Ferozepore, Kakinada, Nasik,
Pondicherry, Raipur, Shillong, Tirunelveli, Tuticorin should be deemed to fall
within Area II. Kakinada, Nasik, Raipur and Tuticorin have, according to the
latest provisional official Census figures, a population exceeding one lac and
would fall within Area II. The State Bank of India has treated all these places,
barring Chandigarh, as falling within Area II. Chandigarh is the capital of the
East Punjab State. The Punjab National Bank Limited has treated Chandigarh
as if it fell within Area II. Having regard to the peculiar conditions prevailing at
each of these places, it is but fair that all these places should be regarded as
falling within Area II and I directly accordingly.
AI
BE
4.185. I will next consider whether any place which would by reason of
its population fall in a lower area should, by reason of the peculiar conditions
prevailing in that place, be upgraded so as to be deemed to fall in a higher
area. It is urged that the cost of living and the standard of life prevailing in
places which are State capitals, hill stations, summer resorts, project areas,
newly developed industrial townships and places in the vicinity of large cities
are very much higher than at other places falling in the same Area. It is urged
that if the areawise classification is to be retained then these places need to
be upgraded. The aforesaid argument applied to a number of places which
fall within the present Area IV and some of these places would be required to
be upgraded if Area IV was to be the normal feature of the wage structure. As
I have already pointed out, there has been a considerable difference in the
total remuneration at present drawn by workmen in Area IV and by workmen
in Area III. It is this largeness of the difference which has contributed to the
great depth of feeling behind the arguments advanced in this connection. On
the aboltion of Area IV, all places falling within Area IV will get upgraded and
would fall in Area III though in view of the great disparity in the remuneration,
a short time will elapse before the remuneration payable in Area III will apply.
There are however some places in Area IV which It is claimed should be
upgraded even above the level of Area III.There is a place called Uttarpara
which is about six miles from Calcutta. The same falls within the Calcutta
industrial belt. The United Bank of India Limited and the United Commercial
Bank Limited have treated this place as if it fell within Area I. Having regard to
the location of this place and other circumstances, it is but fair that this place
should be regarded as falling within Area I, and I direct accordingly.
4.186. There was a demand made that Bhivandi, Dombivli and Pimpri
which are at present in Area IV, should be upgraded to Area II, having regard
to the local conditions prevailing at Bhivandi, Dombivli and Pimpri. Bhivandi is
on the Bombay Agra road and is not far away from either Kalyan or Thana
whose cases I am going to deal with separately. The State Bank of India has
treated Bhivandi as if it fell within Area II. Dombivli is a few miles away from
Kalyan. The Canara Bank Limited has treated Dombivli as if it fell in Area II.
Pimpri is an industrial centre near Poona and the United Commercial Bank
Limited has treated this place as if it fell within Area II. It is but fair that all
these three places, having regard to their special circumstances, should be
92
4.189. Under this award (I) Area I will comprise (1) City of Bombay
including Greater Bombay, (2) City of Calcutta including Howrah, Barrack
pore, Behala Alipore, Cossipur, Garden Reach, Baranagore, Tollygunge, South
Suburban Municipal Area and Dum Dum, (3) City of Delhi including New and
Old Delhi and Delhi Shahdra (4) city of Madras, (5) City of Ahmedabad, (6)
City of Hyderabad comprising areas falling within the Hyderabad Municipal
Corporation limits, Secunderabad, Secunderabad Cantonment and outlaying
urban units being University Area, Malkajgiri, Alwal, Zamistapur, Attapur,
Fathenagar, Bowenpalli, Lalaguda, Kandikal and Machabolirum. (7)
Bangalore comprising areas falling within the Bangalore Corporation limits,
area notified under the Bangalore City Improvement Trust Board Act, excluding
satellite townships and satellite towns within the Trust Board area, (8) Kalyan,
(9) Thana, and (10) Uttarpara and all places which may have a population of
more than twelve lacs.
(II) Area II will comprise all cities other than those included in Area I
which have a population of one lac or more, and Bhivandi, Chandernagore,
Chandigarh, Chinsurah, Cochin; Dombivli, Ferozepore, Kakinada, Nasik,
Pimpri, Pondicherry, Raipur, Shillong, Tirunelveli and Tuticorin.
(III) Area III will comprise all places not already included in Area I and
93
Area II.
4.190. For the purpose of the classification of areas, only the latest
available all India Census figures should be taken into account. A similar
direction was given by the previous Tribunals and it seems to me to be a
salutary direction. Until the final official population figures of the latest 1961
census are available, provisional figures as officially published should be
adopted.
CHAPTER V
Item No. 2 :
AI
BE
5.1 The Sen Tribunal considered it desirable that the basic pay should
represent as large a part of the total emoluments as possible and should be
fixed at a point below which the cost of living is not expected to fall in the near
or foreseeable future and that at the lowest level, the basic wage should be
supplemented by dearness allowance ensuring a fair degree of neutralisation
of the increase in the cost of living. For this purpose, the Sen Tribunal selected
1944 as the base year. The Sen Tribunal saw great merit in adopting that
year as the base year Inter alia because the Central Government was then
publishing the cost of living index series for 15 towns in different parts of India
treating 1944 as the base year and as for the seven towns of Bombay,
Ahmedabad, Sholapur, Jalgaon, Kanpur, Nagpur and Madras it had been
publishing an index series with August 1939 as the base which could without
difficulty be converted to the base year 1944. The Sen Tribunal relied upon
the results of Shri Subramaniams investigations into the budgets of the middle
class employees of the Central Government for the period November 1945 to
August 1946 while considering the question of (1) consumption units, (2) the
difference in cost of living in different areas and (3) the minimum requirements
of a lower middle class family. It came to the conclusion that the figures of
actual expenditure given by Shri Subramaniam could be used as a basis for
arriving at the subsistence level of wages. The monthly requirements of a
lower middle class employee for Bombay, Calcutta and Delhi were worked
out at Rs. 40 per consumption unit or Rs. 90 for 2.25 consumption units in
1946. The requirements of a lower middle class employee in Class II areas
represented by Sholapur, Kanpur, Nagpur and Jamshedpur, were worked out
at Rs. 34 per consumption unit and Rs. 77 for 2.25 consumption units in
1946. About Class III areas the Sen Tribunal observed that they comprised
very large tracts and since calculations similar to those made in case of
Areas I and II were not likely to yield satisfactory results, it assumed a
minimum of Rs. 65 per month as representing the requirements of a clerk in
such Areas for the year 1946. The Tribunal started with the requirements of
2.25 consumption units in the first year of service of an employee, and went
up to the requirements of 4 consumption units in the 25th year of service, in
94
95
First Year
25th Year
Class I Areas
-----
-----
86
265
Class II Areas
-----
-----
73
225
-----
-----
62
191
AI
BE
Working on the basis of these figures as the foundation and using the
differentials which were fixed by it the wage scales for A, B and C Classes of
banks in Areas I, II and III were ultimately built up by the Sen Tribunal after
observing the principles that increments should normally show a rising trend
and that a time scale should provide for a saving wage after the fifteenth year
of service. The peculiarity of Sen Tribunals wage scales is that there is a
base year i.e. 1944 and the dearness allowance is linked to the local indices
converted to 1944 = 100. It was due to this linking of dearness allowance with
local indices, that appreciable differences in pay of the clerks in various
places subsequently became apparent and resulted in considerable
dissatisfaction amongst the bank employees. In connection with wage scales
of the subordinate staff, the Sen Tribunal relied mainly upon the figures in
Shri Deshpandes reports which were in respect of family budgets of industrial
workers in different parts of India and came to the conclusion that the minimum
requirements per month for a new entrant on the basis of 2.25 consumption
units in Class C banks in Class I area would come to Rs. 52, in Class II area
would come to Rs. 43 and in Class III area would come to Rs. 35. As regards
Class B banks the requirements in Class I, Class II and Class III areas were
found to be Rs. 56, Rs. 46 and Rs. 38 respectively. As regards Class A
banks the requirements in Class I, Class II and. Class III areas were found to
be Rs. 60, Rs. 49 and Rs. 40 respectively.
consumption units at the initial start and that at the 10th year of his service,
it should be regarded that a person has a family consisting of a wife and two
children, making a total of 3 consumption units. Dealing more elaborately
with the problem of a proper co-efficient, i.e. ratio of the relative costs of living
of working class and the middle class employees, it has held that this coefficient was not more than 66-2/3 per cent as against the co-efficient of 80
per cent originally arrived at by Justice Rajadhyaksha in his award regarding
the Posts and Telegraphs Departments of the Central Government. The
Sastry Tribunal then considered various other factors relating to wage fixation
such as (i) the productivity of labour, (ii) the prevailing rates of wages in the
same or similar occupations in the same or neighbouring localities, (iii) the
level of national income and its distribution and (iv) the place of the industry in
the economy of the country. It made its observations as regards the relevancy
or otherwise of those concepts in the context of the peculiar conditions
prevailing in the banking industry. It then considered the wage scales awarded
by various Tribunals in the past in relation to employees of banks in various
States, made a comparative study of the wage scales prevalent at that time
in the establishments under the Central and the State Governments, it also
took a cross-section of the wage map of India for clerical staff and compared
the prevailing rates in a mixed bag consisting of industrial concerns,
municipalities, insurance companies, Government departments, port-trusts
and the Reserve Bank of India. It also studied the prevailing rates of wages in
certain industries which were the result of industrial awards. In conjunction
with this the recommendations of the various committees which had anything
to do with the fixation of wages were also taken into account and a detailed
survey of the-banking industry and its capacity to pay higher wages was
made by making an examination of the profit margins, net returns, provision
for reserves, etc., having been fully conscious of the fact that all wages and
costs must in the last analysis come out of the gross yield of the industry
and that the scales were to be adjusted subject to a minimum, to the capacity
to pay. It devised 12 scales being the scales in A, B, C and D Classes of
banks in Areas I, II, III. The basic pay under these scales was less than the
basic pay in the Sen scales of pay and three more scales of pay were added
due to the creation of D Class banks in view of the recommendations of the
Rural Banking Enquiry Committee and the nature of the work in rural areas.
5.2 The Sastry Tribunal reviewed the approach of the Sen Tribunal in
Connection with the fixation of wage scales and came to the conclusion that
it should devise a more direct approach, a simpler method and a more
acceptable technique, keeping clear of all data which was not statistically
established beyond doubt and keeping also in mind the Labour Appellate
Tribunal's criticism of Shri Subramaniams Report and cognate matters. The
Sastry Tribunal considered the various aspects of Shri Subramaniams Report and expressed its doubts about its utility for the purpose of wage fixation
for which it was never intended as the objective of the report was to provide a
basis for middle class cost of living indices. In its view it was not quite safe to
accept that report as representing an accurate picture of the economic
conditions and modes of living of the bank workmen. In connection with the
question as to what should be the size of a family, the Sastry Tribunal observed
that the size of the family of a workman should be taken as consisting of 1.8
96
5.3. The Sastry Tribunal has considered in detail the position of the
Index Numbers which were being published in the country at the time of its
deliberations and decided that in the circumstances prevailing at that time,
the fixed percentage method with a minimum was eminently suitable for the
fixation of dearness allowance in the banking industry for the members of the
clerical staff and that the flat rate system was suitable for a similar purpose
for members of the subordinate staff. As regards the adjustment of the dearness
allowance for future half years commencing from July 1953 to December
1953 onwards the Tribunal considered it proper to link the dearness allowance
97
was limited to towns and cities not included in Class I and Class II which had
a population of more than 30,000, and Class IV area was created comprising
places not included in Class I, Class II and Class III areas. It also created
what is called Class V area comprising places in Class IV area situated in
the former Part B and Part C States other than Delhi, Ajmer and Coorg. It laid
down scales of pay for all classes of banks in Area IV and completely exempted
places in area V from the operation of the Award. The dearness allowance
scheme awarded by the Labour Appellate Tribunal in respect of the clerical
staff was also modified and the rates of dearness allowance for A, B, C and
D Classes of banks for clerks were introduced, which were the same as
those prescribed by the Sastry Tribunal. As regards the subordinate staff
instead of the dearness allowance as prescribed by the Labour Appellate
Tribunal for A, B and C classes of banks and for Areas I, II and III, the dearness
allowance for subordinate staff as fixed by the Sastry Award was prescribed.
5.5. The Bank Award Commission enquired into and ascertained the
effects on emoluments which the employees were in receipt of prior to August
1954 (a) of the Labour Apellate Tribunal without modification and (b) of the
Labour Appellate Tribunal as modified by Government order No. S.R.O. 2732
dated 24th August 1954. This Commission after an elaborate inquiry gave its
recommendations which were accepted in toto by Government and were
enforced by the enactment of the Industrial Disputes (Banking Companies)
Decision Act, 1955. Subsequently, as regards the banks incorporated in
Travancore Cochin State, except the Travancore Bank, the Travancore-Cochin
Banking Inquiry Commission made enquiries to ascertain whether the terms
and conditions of service of workmen of the banks (except the Travancore
Bank) incorporated in the Travancore Cochin State, to which the provisions of
the Industrial Disputes (Banking Companies) Decision Act, 1955 applied
should be modified and if so, in what respect, having regard inter alia to the
effects which the terms and conditions of service that may be recommended
by the Commission, were likely to have on the general economy of the area.
The recommendations of this Commission resulted in the enactment of the
Industrial Disputes (Banking Companies) Decision Amendment Act, 1957.
Broadly speaking, as a result of the recommendations of these two
Commissions, Area IV along with the wage scales and dearness allowance
for that area prescribed by the said Government modification order for the
various classes of banks, came to be retained, but the exempted area,
generally known as Area V was abolished; C Class of banks were divided
into two further classes viz., C-l Class of banks i.e. banks which were capable
of paying the dearness allowance according to the Labour Appellate Tribunal
decision, and C-2 Class of banks i.e. banks which were not in a position to
pay the dearness allowance in accordance with the decision of the Labour
Appellate Tribunal and which would be paying dearness allowance at a lesser
rate. The provision that D Class banks automatically step up to C Class as
from 1st April 1959 gave place to the recommendation of the Bank Award
Commission that the position of these banks should be reexamined at the
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to the rise or fall in the all-India working class cost of living index figure 144
(base 1944 = 100). The Labour Appellate Tribunal felt that no bank clerk
should receive less than a wage which would not only provide him with bare
necessities of life but also give him at least a small measure of comfort, and
considered it a basic principle, well established, that fair wages must have
priority over profits. It also held the view that at least in the case of bigger
banks the Sastry Tribunal ought to have fixed appropriate wages and not a
minimum wage it appeared to have done. The Labour Appellate Tribunal agreed
with the views of the Sastry Tribunal as regards the report of Shri Subramaniam
in connection with fixation of wage scales but it did not agree with its findings
in respect of the size of the family and the co-efficient and regarded that the
basis of 2.25 consumption unit was a reasonable basis for calculating the
measure of a young mans responsibility at the start and that in the absence
of any definite investigation or statistics, the 1.80 co-efficient should be
maintained. The Labour Appellate Tribunal has been influenced, while devising
its wage structure, by another consideration, namely, that the clerk in an A
class bank in Class I area should receive as his starting total emolument
something midway between Rs. 130 (which the Central Government gives to
its clerk) and the wages of higher commercial firms, excluding the oil
companies to avoid possible contentions. The scales of wages which the
Labour Appellate Tribunal finally) devised while modifying the Sastry Award,
closely followed the pattern of wage scales of the Sastry Tribunal but with a
little higher minimum and maximum, except in A Class banks in area-1
where the same minimum and maximum were kept. It retained the Sastry
scales of wages for D Class banks with the proviso that they were to remain
in force till 31st March 1959 and that thereafter all D Class banks were to
step into C Class. It, however, raised the rates of dearness allowance
considerably for A, B and C Class banks in order that the total emoluments
may be increased and may reach the required level in view of the abovementioned consideration. About the pay scales of the subordinate staff, the
Labour Appellate Tribunal has said that as far as practicable it has considered
the same against the background and on the principles discussed by it in
connection with the clerical staff. After considering the pay-scales of the
Sastry Tribunal and the total emoluments paid by the commercial concerns
in Bombay and Calcutta and by the Central Government in Bombay to the
members of the subordinate staff, it ultimately decided to retain the wage
scales of the subordinate staff awarded by the Sastry Tribunal but increased
the dearness allowance payable by A, B and C Class banks in Areas I, II and
III. As regards the subordinate staff of D Class banks, the scales of pay and
dearness allowance given by the Sastry Tribunal were allowed to remain in
operation for five years from 1st April 1954 after which period the scales of
the C Class banks were to be applicable to them.
5.4. The Government modified the decision of the Labour Appellate Tribunal
by its Order No. S.R.O. 2732, dated 24th August 1954, and Class III area
98
99
end of five years from 1st April 1954 with a view to considering the structure
of wages and allowance for their employees. The Labour Appellate Tribunals
formula of adjustment of dearness allowance was revised, but in this respect
the Commission was keen to see that whatever alternate formula was devised
should have the merit of interfering as little as possible with the Labour Appellate
Tribunals wage structure and of ensuring results not significantly different
from those achieved by the Labour Appellate Tribunals formula. In the exercise
of the powers cornferred upon it by sub-section (5) of section 3 of the Industrial
Disputes (Banking Companies) Decision Act, 1955, the Central Government
has on 13th February 1960 made an adjustment in the dearness allowance
formula.
9191EB9236
III
-----
-----
Rs. 66369485510061127
14081649182EB9227
IV
-----
-----
Rs. 57369485510061127
1408156EB81649200
Class C Banks (Including C-2)
-----
-----
Rs. 694855100611271408
1649191EB9236
II
-----
-----
Rs. 63369485510061127
14081649173EB9218
III
-----
-----
Rs. 60369485510061127
1408164EB9209
IV
-----
-----
Rs. 54369485510061127
1408148EB81649191
The present wage scales and dearness allowance in the banking industry
are, therefore, the result of (a) the Sastry Award, (b) the modifications made
in the Sastry Award by the Labour Appellate Tribunals decision, (c) the
modifications made by the Government modification Order No. SRO-2732
dated 24th August 1954 (d) the part restoration of the Labour Appellate
Tribunals decision after the incorporation of the recommendations of the
Bank Award Commission in the Industrial Disputes (Banking Companies)
Decision Act, 1955 (e) the further restoration of the Labour Appellate Tribunals
decision in respect of the banks in the State which is now known as Kerla
State by reason of the recommendations of the Travancore-Cochin Banking
Enquiry Commission whose recommendations were incorporated in the
Industrial Disputes (Banking Companies) Decision Amendment Act, 1957
and (f) the modification made by the Government in the dearness allowance
adjustment formula on 13th February I960. The wage scales and the scheme
of dearness allowance which have thus emerged are given below :
Area
I
Area
I
-----
-----
Rs. 573694855100611271408156EB81649200
II
-----
-----
Rs. 543694855100611271408148EB81649191
-----
Rs. 51369485510061127-
BE
AI
CLERICAL STAFF
III & IV
140EB81649182
SUBORDINATE STAFF
-----
-----
Rs. 8551006112714081649
227EB92451026515280
II
-----
-----
Rs. 774855100611271408
1649209EB924510255
III
-----
-----
Rs. 734855100611271408164
9200EB9245
IV
-----
-----
Rs. 66369485510061127140
81649182EB9227
Class A Banks
Area
I
----II
III & IV
---------
-----
-----
Rs. 774855100611271408
1649209EB924510255
II
-----
-----
Rs. 69495100611271408164
100
Rs. 40254170272
Rs. 36254169
Rs. 34254168
Class B Banks
Area
I
----II
----III & IV
-------------
Class B Banks
Area
Claas D Banks
Rs. 36254169
Rs. 34254168
Rs. 32254167
Class C Banks (including C-2)
Area
I
----II
----III & IV
-------------
Rs. 34254168
Rs. 32254167
Rs. 30254166
101
Class D Banks
Area
I
----II
----III & IV -----
-------------
If the average all-India cost of living index for any quarter after the 31st
March, 1959 should rise or fall by more than five points as compared to 144
(1944 = 100), the dearness allowance payable for the succeeding quarter
shall be raised or lowered, in the case of clerical staff by one-fourteenth, and
in the case of subordinate staff by one-twentieth, of the dearness allowance
admissible at the index level of 144 for each variation of five points.
Rs. 32254167
Rs. 30254166
Rs. 28254165
DEARNESS ALLOWANCE
Clerical Staff
(a) For A, B and C-l Class of banks
Maximum
Rs. 50
-----
-------------
-------------
50%
40%
35%
Area II
Rs. 45
-----
---------
---------
45%
35%
30%
Area III
Rs. 40
-----
-------------
-------------
40%
30%
25%
Area IV
Rs. 25
-----
Area I
Area II
Areas III and IV
33-1/3%
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Area I
Minimum
Rs.
35
30
25
Maximum
Rs.
70
60
40
Subordinate Staff
A Class Banks
B Class Banks
C-1 Class Banks
C-2 Class Banks
D Class Banks
Minimum
Area I
Rs.
Area II
Rs.
Area III
Rs.
Area IV
Rs.
42/50
40/37/50
15/13/-
40/37/50
35/12/12/-
37/50
35/32/50
10/10/-
25/20/10/10/10/-
102
5.7. The All India Bank Employees Association has made demands for
higher wage scales etc., on the basis that during the period of operation of
the aforesaid scales of wages and dearness allowance, radical changes have,
taken place. It has, referred to (1) important changes in the national economy,
(2) the fast deterioration in the living conditions, and (3) the change in the
wage concept. It has pointed out that a clerk in a D Class bank in the first
year of his service (working capital upto one crore) in class I area (CalcuttaBombay) draws at the cost of living index figure of 170(1944 = 100) Rs.
112.50 per month as against a member of the subordinate staff similarly
situated who draws Rs. 56/- per month. In Class IV area the respective
amounts drawn are Rs. 86.25 and Rs. 40.50 per month. It is urged that a
good number of the bank employees in different parts of the country were
drawing much less than their counterparts working in any comparable
concerns in those parts. The Association further states that the wage structure
applicable to banking industry at present was determined on a basis which
has changed. It has submitted that the entire economy situation in the country
has undergone a radical change that two successful Five Year Plans had
been launched and executed; that the industrial potential had gone up; that
the prices were soaring, particularly of the foodstuffs and other consumer
goods; that there was a sharp decline in the purchasing power of the common
man; that the living conditions of today stood no comparison with those of
the earlier period that the norms of a need based wage stood crystalised as
a result of the resolution passed by the 15th Tripartite Labour Conference;
that the wages fixed in the year 1953 were wholly out of date and unreal and
that an immediate upward revision of the wage structure of bank employees
in the light of the changed circumstances had become necessary.
103
of living is not expected to go down in the foreseeable future, and that the
basic wage should represent as large a part of the total emoluments as
possible. The Association has submitted that the all India working class
consumer price index number 105 for the year 1956 in the series 1949 = 100
should be taken as the base. It considers the norms laid down by the 15th
Labour Conference as inadequate. According to the Association even on the
footing of these norms a minimum of Rs. 140/- was payable to any bank
workman in any part of the country on the 1956 average prices at the working
class consumer price index No. 105 (1949=100). Applying the 80 per
cent co-efficient to Rs. 140/-, the Association contends that a middle
class employee will need Rs. 252/- for the satisfaction of his minimum needs,
and that the minimum wage payable to a clerk in any bank in any part of the
country at the working class consumer price index number of 105 (1949-100)
would be Rs. 252/-.
5.11. In the Statement of claim filed by the State Bank of India Staff
Union, Andhra Pradesh, Vijayawada, it is pointed out that in April 1950 the
Prime Minister had made a statement in the Parliament to the effect that
Government was committed to the principles of fair wages as recommended
by the Fair Wages Committee. It has pleaded for the fixation of a minimum
wage on the basis of pre-war prices because as stated by it prices have been
fluctuating during and after the war, with the result that it was not easy to get
reliable figures for ascertaining the cost of the minimum requirements of
workmen and that the more, reliable figures of prices of food, clothing, rent,
etc., before the war would be a better basis for calculation of the minimum
wage. According to the union the resolution of the 15th Indian Labour
Conference was a compromise where the Labour was made to sacrifice heavily
for the sake of unanimity and the only benefit conferred was that in the future
wage fixation, workers would not have to cover the whole ground once again
but to start with the guaranted minimum, though the minimum was very law
and unsatisfactory in several ways. The union has however calculated the
minimum needs of workmen on the basis of the formula laid down by the
15th Labour Conference taking the consumer price index number 360 in
1939 = 100 series, and has arrived at the minimum wage of Rs. 127.87 per
mensem but has claimed a minimum wage of Rs. 125/- for the lowest paid
employee in the State Bank of India. Applying the 1.80 co-efficient it has
demanded a minimum of Rs. 220/- for a clerk in The State Bank. The All
India State Bank of India State Federation has closely followed the logic and
conclusions of the State Bank of India Staff Union, Andhra Pradesh. The
State Bank of Patiala (All Cadres) Employees Association has pleaded that
since this bank has been re-constituted as a subsidiary of the Stale Bank of
India, it should be completely merged with the State Bank of India ,or in the
alternative pay scales and service conditions and other benefits enjoyed by
the employees of the State Bank of India should be enforced also for the
employees of the State Bank of Patiala.
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5.9. The All India Bank Employees Federation holds the view that
circumstances have materially changed since the modified Sastry Award
came into force and it advances the following grounds in support of its
contention :
employees is 80 per cent more than that of the working class employee, and
having regard to other relevant factors and the revision of pay and allowances
of the officers staff in the banks during the last five years, a revision of scales
of pay is fully justified.
The Federation states that on the basis of the norms laid down at the
15th Indian Labour Conference, the national minimum subsistence wage for
the lowest paid unskilled worker comes to about Rs.150/- per month, and
taking the generally accepted view that the cost of living of the middle class
104
105
A
1.
Clerks
Rs. 22010240
12 1/229015
365-20-42525
-550
Rs. 125-5155
-6-185-7192
-8-232-9250
Rs. 19010240
121/2i29015
365-20425-25
-475.
Subordinate
Rs. 112-4-120
-5-155-6-185
-7-192-8-224
4.
Rs. 17010-240
121/2-29015
36520425.
Subordinate
Rs.75-4-95-120-6150
Rs. 100-4-120
-5-155-6-185
-7-192-8-200
5.
Clerks
All India Bank
Employees
Federation.
Rs. 1501025015400-20500
Clerks
All India State Rs. 22010240
Bank of India
121/229015365Staff Federation 20-425-25-550
Sub-Accountants and Head Cashiers.
Rs. 500-20-700
Subordinate
Rs. 125-5155-6185-7-1928
2329250
Rs. 105-5-160-7-230
The Vadodra
Rajya Bank
Nokar Sangh.
Rs. 70 -3-85-4-105
130-6160
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3.
6.
BE
Subordinates
Rs. 75-390-4-11051355165
Subordinates
Rs. 65-3-80-4-1005125
Rs.125-10-22515375-20-475.
Clerks
State Bank of
Rs.150-10-200-15-350
Patiala (All Cadres)
Employees
Association.
2.
Drivers
Rs. 100-3-115-4135-5-160
Clerks
Rs. 150-10-200 Rs.120-10-200
1227520
-12-275-2037525500
375-25-425
Rs. 10010200
-12-275-20375
Subordinates
Rs. 8551006
112-7-140-8164-9-245
Rs. 73-4855
100-6-1127
140-8164-9-218
Rs. 77-4855
100-6-112-7
140-8-164-9-227
Clerks
7.
The Indian
Rs. 225-10-275Overseas Bank 15-350-20-550
Employees
Union, Madras.
Subordinates
Rs. 1255-165-6-183
8215
Clerks
8.
The Cochin
Commercial
Bank
Employees
Association.
Rs. 705-906
11471428
1749210
Subordinates
Rs. 35-2-651-70
106
107
9.
5.13 The State Bank of India Staff Union, Vijayawada, The State Bank of
India Employees Association (Bengal Circle), The All India Bank of Baroda
Employees Federation, the South Gujarat Bank of Baroda Employees Union,
have all demanded wage scales for the members of the clerical staff and the
subordinate staff which are the same as those demanded by the All India
Bank Employees Association for A Class banks.
Clerks
Rs. 15010250- Rs. 125-10-225
15-400
15-375
The Central
Bank of India
Employees
Association,
Patna.
Rs. 703854
10551306160
Subordinates
Rs. 753-904110-4-135-6-165
Rs. 125-5-1556-185-7-192-8
-232-9-250
5.15. The All India Bank Employees Association has stated that by
providing a minimum of Rs. 220/- in the pay-scale in A Class banks it did not
mean that the junior-most clerk in A group of banks would be getting a fair
wage on the 1956 price level and that it was not even half the fair wage.
Rs.170-10-240
-12 -290-15365-20425
AI
Clerks
13. The Allahabad Rs.220-10-260
Rs.190-10-260
Bank Emplo1535020
-15-335-20yees, Union,
45025-550
435-25-485
Calcutta.
BE
Clerks
12. The Central
Rs. 15010250
Bank of India, 15400
Employees Association,
Amritsar.
Subordinates
Rs.112-4-120
-51556-185
7-192-8-224
Clerks
14. Employees
Rs. 17010240
Association of 12-29015
the Union Bank 365-20-425
of Bijapur and
Sholapur.
Subordinates
Rs. 10041205
155-6185-71928-200.
108
5.14. In the above table the expression A class, B class and C class will
have different meanings attached to them having regard to the demands made
by various unions and associations of workmen. Most of the all-India Unions
have indicated that they have framed the pay scales demanded by them on
the basis of the norms laid down by the 15th Indian Labour Conference
Resolution. As has been indicated earlier, the All India Bank Employees
Association has given the indication that its pay scales are in relation to the
base year 1956 when the average all-India index number was 105 in 1949=100
series. Some unions of workmen in the State Bank of India have framed their
demands on the all-India consumer price index No. 360 with base 1939 =
100. Several unions have not mentioned the consumer price index level at
which they have framed their pay scales. A large number of unions have
however adopted the All India Bank Employees Associations scales.
Rs.100-4-1205-155-6-1857-192-8-200
5.16. The banks have, in general, denied the allegations made by the
employees in their various statements of claim and have refuted the
contentions raised by them in favour of a revision in the existing wage structure.
It is denied that any radical changes have taken place. It is their contention
that the present basic pay and dearness allowance in the banking industry
have been laid down after elaborate enquiry and after taking into consideration
all factors and circumstances appropriate for wage fixation, including the
principles laid down by the Fair Wages Committee. A reference has been
made to the observations of the Bank Award Commission in paragraph 49 of
its report where the Commission has observed that the wages given to
employees in A class banks border on the higher level of a fair wage and
those given to employees in B class banks border on the lower level of a fair
wage. It is stated that if the principles laid down by the Fair Wages Committee
were taken into consideration, it would be clear that the present rates of
emoluments of the bank employees were fair and even generous. It is pleaded
that the demand for wage increase should be Examined, bearing in mind,
inter alia, the economic policy and the economic situation in the country.
5.17. In regard to the understanding reached at the 15th Tripartite Labour
Conference at which the norms of the need based wage were laid down
some of the banks point out that the resolution related to industrial workmen,
that the resolution did not apply to banks, that no representatives of banks
109
shift in the pattern of national income distribution and that the need of the
country today was the ploughing back of a substantial portion of the national
income into the various projects for the development of the country. It is
submitted that in case a consolidation of dearness allowance with the basic
pay is envisaged, its overall effect on provident fund, gratuity, pension etc.,
must be considered before arriving at any conclusion.
5.18. On behalf of the State Bank of India and its Subsidiaries, the
peculiar position and the special features of these banks and their functions
and obligations are required to be kept in view. It is urged that these banks
are now in the public sector and that the emoluments of their employees
should not be out of step with the emoluments paid to other employees in the
public sector.
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were present, that the problems of banks were not examined by Conference
and that what was sought to be achieved by the resolution of that conference
was an ideal which was impossible of attainment within of reasonable period
of time. The correctness of the various components of the resolution which
deal with consumption units and minimum requirements of food, clothing,
etc. has been disputed. The use of 80 per cent coefficient while fixing the
wage scales of the clerical staff from the wage scales of the subordinate
staff, is also not accepted. The banks by and large have pleaded their inability
to pay wages according to the estimates of need based wage made by the
employees. The Exchange Banks and the State Bank of India do not plead
incapacity to pay reasonable wages but they deny that they can afford to pay
or could reasonably be called upon to pay the need based wage of the order
calculated by the workmen. The correctness and soundness or relevance of
taking the year 1956 as the base year for the fixation of wage scales has not
been accepted. It is urged that the mere fact that the Second Five Year Plan
was undertaken in 1956 is not a ground for taking the year 1956 as the base
year. It is denied that there was no chance of the cost of living going down
below the level existing in the year 1956. On the other hand, it is considered
that in the near future projects undertaken during the First and the Second
Five Year Plans should begin to yield results with every possibility of the
prices being kept under control. The contention of the employees that there
has been a tremendous rise in the cost of living resulting in sharp decline in
the purchasing power of the common man is not accepted. It is stated that
the average rise of five points a year during the last three years in the all India
working class consumer price index was due to the failure of crops and easy
money conditions, and that for the removal of these Conditions the Government
was taking steps. The other reasons given on account of which some of the
bankers consider that the prices of essential commodities will be coming
under control are that with the recent agreements made by India with foreign
Governments, more and more food would find its way into the country on
easy payment basis, that as a result of the emphasis on improvement in
agriculture in the Third Five Year Plan food production will increase, bringing
down the food prices and that more consumer goods will be rolled out on
account of the investment in heavy industries during the First and the Second
Five Year Plans. Some of the banks recognise the necessity of taking a
particular cost of living figures for the purpose of wage fixation, but they
consider that the said figure will always remain a matter of conjecture as it
was difficult to determine the level below which the cost of living was not
expected to fall in the near future. It is submitted that in demanding a wage
fixation at the index No. of 105 the intention of the employees was to have as
large a part of the dearness allowance consolidated in the basic pay as
possible. In connection with the contention of the employees that the national
income has increased and therefore they should have a share of it, some of
the banks urge that the question of augmenting of national income is quite
distinct from the question of distribution of national income, that there is a
110
5.20. It is submitted that when bringing this bank within the ambit of the
111
5.23. The Northern India Banks Association has pleaded that the Sastry
Tribunal was of the view that the paying capacity of D Class banks, most of
whom had migrated following the partition of the country from the territories
now forming the part of West Pakistan, was very low and that the same was
the reason why the scales of pay fixed by the Sastry Award for such class of
banks were upheld by the Labour Appellate Tribunal decision, by the
Government modification order and finally by the Bank Award Commission.
The Association has expressed itself in favour of taking the base year of
1949 = 100 The Association considers that the existing minimum and
maximum of the scales are fair and reasonable, but in case the Tribunal
found it necessary to change the scales of pay the Association has proposed
the following scales of pay applicable to clerical and subordinate staff in C
class banks
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to the Sastry Award as modified. In connection with the principles and basis
of wage fixation on which the workmen have placed reliance in connection
with revision of their wage scales, the Association submits that they can
only be applied in advanced countries like the United Kingdom or the United
States of America where the per capita national income is high and that in an
under-developed country like India where the standard of living is much lower
the level of wages will have to depend upon the capacity of the industry to
pay and should have relation to the level of wages in other industries depending
upon the area of operation and other relevant matters. The Association is
against the merger of a part of the dearness allowance with the basic wage
as it considers that the totality of the burden would become heavy.
5.21. The Kerala Bankers Association has invited attention to the peculiar
feature of Kerala which is advancing money on landed property. It has also
invited attention to the majority report of the non-satutory committee appointed
by the Government of Kerala to go into the question of fixation of salaries and
allowances of employees of the non-award banks, consisting of four
representatives of the Bankers Association and four representatives of the
Kerala Employees Union under the Chairmanship of Shri K. T. Ninan Koshi.
This committee has by a majority made recommendations about the salaries
and other allowances of employees in the non-award banks.
112
Area I
Area II
Area III
Area IV.
Clerks
Rs.. 705105614771968252 EB9315.
Rs. 655100614271918247EB9310.
Rs. 60595613771868242EB9305.
Rs. 55590613271818237EB9300
Peons
113
in the year 1956 and considers that the whole economy of the country was
being so worked and planned that the cost of living should come down steeply
to the level which existed in pre-war days as under the Third Five Year Plan,
complete self-sufficiency in food and cloth is envisaged, free compulsory
education at certain standards has been promised, deficit financing has been
abandoned as a method of future finance, complete check on inflation is in
view, and heavy taxes are in the offing.
months notice by either party, that such notice had not been served by
workmen on the bank and that the said agreement was legally binding on the
workmen. On merits, the bank opposes the demand of the employees about
the pay scales and considers that the pay scales and dearness allowance
under the above mentioned agreement were adequate and no further increase
or improvement in them was called for either from the point of view of the
capacity of the bank to pay or from the point of view of the needs of the
workmen.
Area 5 and 4 :
Area 3 and 2 :
Area 1 :
BE
Areas 5 and 4 :
Areas 3 and 2 :
Area 1 :
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5.27. The scheme of basic wages and the scheme of dearness allowance
in force at present are the result of the working of many minds at various
levels and provide a pattern which is unique. The wage structure differs
according to the class of banks and according to the area which the banking
establishments are situate. At the all-India working class consumer price
index No. 123 in the series 1949 = 100 an employee in the clerical grade in
the first year of his service in Area I is paid by A Class banks Rs. 85 as basic
pay and Rs. 67.85 as dearness allowance, by B Class banks Rs. 77 as
basic pay and Rs. 67.85 as dearness allowance, by C-l Class banks Rs. 69
as basic pay and Rs. 67.85 as dearness allowance, by C-2 Class banks Rs.
69 as basic pay and Rs. 47.50 as dearness allowance and by D Class banks
Rs. 57 as basic pay and Rs. 47.50 as dearness allowance. As regards a
member of the subordinate staff in the first year of his service, the picture is
somewhat different. In Area I and at the same index figure of 123, A Class
banks pay Rs. 40 as basic pay and Rs. 53.13 as dearness allowance, B
Class banks pay Rs. 36 as basic pay and Rs. 50 as dearness allowance, Cl Class banks pay Rs. 34 as basic pay and Rs. 46.87 as dearness allowance,
C-2 Class banks pay Rs. 34 as basic pay and Rs. 18.75 as dearness allowance
and D Class banks pay Rs. 32 as basic pay and Rs. 16.25 as dearness
allowance.
5.25. The Bharatha Lakshmi Bank admits the principle of pay according
to capacity and suggests the creation of 5 areas on the basis of population,
the respective figure being (1) 10 lacs and over, (2) more than 5 lacs but less
than 10 lacs, (3) one lac and above but less than 5 lacs, (4) 30,000 and above
but less 1 lac and (5) less than 30,000. The scales of pay for the five areas in
respect of Class D banks with working funds of less than rupees one crore as
suggested by the bank are as under :
5.28. In Area II, at the same index number of 123 in the series 1949=100
a member of the Clerical staff in the first year of his service is paid by A Class
banks a basic pay of Rs. 77 and dearness allowance of Rs. 61.05, by B
Class banks a basic pay of Rs. 69 and dearness allowance of Rs. 61.05, by
C-l Class banks a basic pay of Rs. 63 and dearness allowance of Rs. 61.05,
by C-2 Class banks a basic pay of Rs. 63 and dearness allowance of Rs.
40.70 and by D Class banks a basic pay of Rs. 54 and dearness allowance
of Rs. 40.70.
5.29. In Area II a member of the subordinate staff in the First year of his
service is paid at the same index No. 123 by A Class banks a basic pay of
Rs. 36 and dearness allowance of Rs. 50, by B Class banks a basic pay of
Rs. 34 and dearness allowance of Rs. 46.87, by C-l Class banks a basic pay
of Rs. 32 and dearness allowance of Rs. 43.75, by C-2 Class banks a basic
pay of Rs. 32 and dearness allowance of Rs. 15 and by D Class banks a
basic pay of Rs. 30 and dearness allowance of Rs. 15.
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Area IV
57.00
42.50
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65.25
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5.32. The total emoluments payable under the Sastry Award as modified
at the all-India working class consumer price index No. 123 base 1949 =100,
to all members of the clerical and subordinate staff in the first year of service
in various classes of banks and in various areas are as under :
Total emoluments in various Classes of banks
Areas
A Class
Area I
Area II
Area III
Area IV
152.85
138.05
127.25
99.90
Area I
Area II
Area III
93.13
86.00
80.87
B Class
C Class
--------------------------------------------- D Class
C-l
C-2
Clerks
144.85
130.05
120.25
90.90
Subordinate
86.00
80.87
75.75
136.85
124.05
114.25
87.90
116.50
103.70
93.90
87.90
104.50
94.70
84.90
84.90
80.87
75.75
70.62
52.75
47.00
42.50
48.25
45.00
40.50
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42.50
40.50
5.33. It will be seen from the above that the total emoluments (i.e. basic
wage plus dearness allowance) payable by A, B and C-l class of banks in
Area I, in Area II and in Area III are fairly correlated. The differences in the
amounts payable by D Class banks by C-l Class banks in Area I, Area II and
Area III are large. The differences in the amounts payable in Area IV and
payable in Area III by A, B, and C-l Classes of banks are also large. There is
a considerable gulf between the emoluments payable in Areas I, II and III by
C-l Class banks and by C-2 Class banks though all of them fall within one
common class regard being had to the working funds. Anomalous situations
arise when, banks get upgraded from Class D to Class C-l by reason of their
working funds touching or crossing, the limit of Rs 1crore for the requisite
period and when by reason of the increase in population or as a result of any
voluntary action of a bank, or as a result of any agreement or award, a place
in Area IV is upgraded to Area III. When a B Class bank gets upgraded and
becomes an A Class bank, the emoluments payable to the members of the
clerical staff in Area I in the first year of service increase from Rs. 144.85 to
Rs. 152.85, the percentage of increase being 5.52. When a C-l Class bank
gets upgraded to B Class, the emoluments of a similar employee increase
from Rs. 136.85 to Rs. 144.85 the percentage of increase being 5.84. When,
however, a D Class bank gets upgraded to C-l Class under the terms of the
Sastry Award as modified on its working funds reaching or crossing the limit
of one crore for the requisite period, on such upgradation a member of the
clerical staff in the first year of service who is drawing Rs. 104.50 will receive
Rs. 136.85, the percentage of the increase being 30.8. A C-2 Class bank
whose working funds might be very much more than those of such newly
upgraded bank will pay Rs. 116.50 only as against Rs. 136.85 payable by
such newly upgraded bank. On similar upgradation of a D Class bank to Cl Class the percentage of increase in the emoluments of a member of the
clerical staff in the first year of service in Areas II and III would be 30 and 34.5
respectively. As regards a member of the subordinate staff in the first year of
his service the percentages of such increase in Areas I, II and III on such
upgradation of a bank from Class D to Class C-l will be 67.6, 68 and 74
respectively as against only 6.3, 6.7 and 7.2 percentages of increase on
upgradation of a bank from Class C-l to Class B in Areas I, II and III respectively
and 8.3, 6.3 and 6.7 percentages of increase on upgradation of a bank from
Class B to Class A in Areas I, II and III respectively. When a place in Area IV
is upgraded to Area III, a C-l Class bank will have to give to an employee in
the clerical grade in the first year of his service an increase from Rs. 87.90 to
Rs. 114.25, a B Class bank would have to give an increase from Rs. 90.90 to
Rs. 120.25 and an A Class bank would have to give an increase from Rs.
99.90 to Rs. 127.25. When, however, a place in Area III is upgraded to Area
II or a place in Area II is upgraded to Area I the incidence of increase is very
much less. Similar anomalies will be found in respect of the emoluments
5.30. In Area III at the same index number a member of the clerical staff
in the first year of his service is paid by A Class banks a basic pay of Rs. 73
and dearness allowance of Rs. 54.25, by B Class banks a basic pay of Rs.
66 and dearness allowance of Rs. 54.25, by C-l Class banks a basic pay of
Rs. 60 and dearness allowance of Rs. 54.25, by C-2 Class banks a basic
pay of Rs. 60 and dearness allowance of Rs. 33.90 and by D Class banks a
basic pay of Rs. 51 and dearness allowance of Rs. 33.90. The wage picture
as regards the subordinate staff in Area III, at the same index number, is that
under similar circumstances A Class banks pay a basic pay of Rs. 34 and
dearness allowance of Rs. 46.87, B Class banks pay a basic pay of Rs. 32
and dearness allowance of Rs. 43.75, C-l Class banks pay a basic pay of
Rs. 30 and dearness allowance of Rs. 40.62, C-2 Class banks pay a basic
pay of Rs. 30 and dearness allowance of Rs. 12.50 and D Classes banks
pay a Basic pay of Rs. 28 and dearness allowance of Rs. 12.50.
117
parties must make their own contracts. The Courts reach their limit of power
when they enforce contracts which the parties have made. An Industrial
Tribunal is not so fettered and may create new obligations or modify contracts
in the interest of industrial peace, to protect legitimate trade union activities
and to prevent unfair practice or victimisation. It has been so held by the
Supreme Court in Rohtas Industries Ltd. v. Brijnandan Pande and others,
1956 Supreme Court Report 800, 1956 (II) Labour Law Journal 444 at page
449. As observed by Ludwig Teller in Labour Disputes and Collective
Bargaining, Vol. I at page 536 :
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5.35. This Tribunal has been constituted under the Industrial Disputes
Act, 1947. The preamble to the Act indicates that the said Act was enacted
to make provision for the investigation and settlement of industrial disputes,
and for certain other purposes appearing in the said Act. Under section 7B,
the Central Government is empowered to constitute one or more National
Industrial Tribunals for the adjudication of the industrial disputes which, in
the.opinion of the Central Government, involve questions of a national
importance or for the adjudication of industrial disputes which are of such a
nature that industrial establishments situated in more than one State are
likely to be interested in, or affected by, such disputes. In considering disputes
the adjudication whereof involves questions of a national importance it would
not be out of place to refer to the following words of the Preamble to the
Constitution of India which express the will of the people of India :
We, the People of India, having solemnly resolved............to secure
to all its citizens : Justice, social, economic and political; ............
Equality of status and of opportunity; and to promote among them all
Fraternity assuring the dignity of the individual..................... give to
ourselves this Constitution.
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118
These concepts have been fairly dealt with in the report of the Committee
on Fair Wages. A large part of its conclusions has been accepted by the
Supreme Court in the case of Express Newspapers (Private) Ltd. and another
v. The Union of India, 1959 Supreme Court Report 12, 1961(1) Labour Law
Journal 339. The most expressive definition of a living wage is that given by
Justice Higgins of the Australian Commonwealth Court of Conciliation in the
Harvester case. A living wage is defined by Justice Higgins as one appropriate
for the normal needs of the average employee, regarded as a human being
living in a civilised community. This cryptic pronouncement has been explained
by Justice Higgins by saying that a living wage must provide not merely for
absolute essentials such as food, shelter and clothing but for a condition of
frugal comfort estimated by current human standards.It must be a wage
sufficient to insure the workman food, shelter, clothing, frugal comfort, provision
119
for evil days, etc. as well as regard for the special skill of an artisan if he is
one. In a subsequent case he observed that treating marriage as the usual
fate of adult men, a wage which does not allow of the matrimonial condition
and the maintenance of about five persons in a home would not be treated as
a living wage In the Report of the Committee on Fair Wages it is stated in
paragraph 7 as under :
because their contents are elastic and they are bound to vary from
time to time and from country to country....................................
What is a subsistence wage in one country may appear to be much
below the subsistence level in another; the same is true about a fair
wage and a living wage; what is a fair wage in one country may be
treated as a living wage in another, whereas what may be regarded
as a living wage in one country may be no more than a fair wage in
another.
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The amount of the living wage in money terms will vary as between
trade and trade, between locality and locality. But the.idea is that
every workman shall have a wage which will maintain him in the
highest state of industrial efficiency, which will enable him to provide
his family with all the material things which are needed for their health
and physical well being, enough to enable him to qualify to discharge
his duties as a citizen.
120
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It has further observed at page 239 that under the living wage a workman
would be entitled to claim an optimum diet as prescribed by Dr. Aykroyd.
Similarly the requirements as to clothing and residence which have been
recognised in the tripartite resolution, though appropriate in reference to a
need based minimum wage would have to be widened in relation to a living
wage. Besides, in determining the money value of the living wage it would be
necessary to take into account the requirements of good education for
children, some amusement, and some expenditure for self development.
there is general agreement that the living wage should enable the
male earner to provide for himself and his family not merely the bare
essential of food, clothing and shelter but a measure of frugal comfort
including education for the children, protection against ill-health,
requirements of essential social needs, and a measure of insurance
against the more important misfortunes including old age.
121
a particular unit or the capacity of all industries in the country. The relevant
criterion should be the capacity of a particular industry in a specified region
to be ascertained by taking a fair cross section of that industry. The Supreme
Court in the case of the Express Newspapers (Private) Ltd. at page 366 has
observed that:
The capacity of an industry to pay should be gauged on an industrycum-region basis after taking a fair cross-section of that industry.
In a given case it may be even permissible to divide the industry
into appropriate classes and then deal with the capacity of the
industry to pay classwise.
5.44. In the First Five Year Plan the authors thereof have observed at
page 584 as follows :
2 (a) All wage adjustments should conform to the broad principles of
social policy and disparities of income have to be reduced to the
utmost extent. The worker must obtain his due share in the national
income.
5.45. The principles of industrial adjudication have been well set out in
the decision of the Supreme Court in the case of M/s. Crown Aluminium
Works v. Their Workmen, reported in 1958 (1) Labour Law Journal page 1 at
page 6 in words following which may well be reproduced here :
BE
5.43. E. M. Burns in the book Wages and the States has at page 387
referred to various considerations which have to be borne in mind when fixing
wages.
AI
Again unless what the trade can bear be held to imply that in no
circumstances should the existing rate of profit be reduced, there
is no reason why attempts should not be made to discover how far
it is possible to force employers to bear the burden of an increased
rate without driving them out of business. This would involve an
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5.46. This Tribunal will have to keep in mind these principles to the
extent that they are applicable in the circumstances of the case.
5.47. The problem of wage determination cannot be considered in isolation
from the larger economic and social background obtaining in the country. A
delicate balance has to be struck between fair wages to workers and officers
fair profits to the shareholders and fair service at reasonable rates to the
community, after taking into account the share of the Government in profits
in the shape of taxes and after considering the amounts of reserves and
depreciation necessary for the stability and healthy functioning of the industry.
From the purely economic point of view the wage policy has to take into
123
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
5.50. While agreeing to these guide lines for fixation of the minimum
wage for industrial workers throughout the country, the Committee recognised
the existence of instances where difflculies might be experienced in
implementing these recommendations. Wherever the minimum wage fixed
went below the recommendations, it would be incumbent on the authorities
concerned to justify the circumstances which prevented them from the
adherence to the norms laid down.
BE
5.48. The Second Five Year Plan at page 579 refers to one important
aspect of wage policy, namely, the laying down of principles to bring wages
into conformity with the expectations of the working class in the future pattern
of society.
AI
These notes were circulated with a view that the 15th Indian Labour Conference
may discuss them and reach conclusions in the light of which the notes
could be modified and sent to the wage fixing authorities as conclusions of
the Indian Labour Conference. At the meeting of the 15th Indian Labour
Conference, which was held in the month of July 1957, a committee was
appointed to deal inter alia, with an item on the agenda relating to the wage
policy during the Second Five Year Plan. The committee considered the four
notes placed before it and felt that they would be useful as background material
for wage fixation. It took note of the difficulties in assessing quantitatively the
individual importance of various factors affecting wage fixation, such as,
productivity, cost of living and relation of wages to national income and
discussed the wage policy with specific reference to minimum wages and
fair wages. The recommendations of this commitee were adopted with certain
modifications by the 15th Indian Labour Conference. The Resolution of the
15th Indian Labour Conference on the subject provides as under :
With regard to the minimum wage fixation it was agreed that the
minimum wage was need based and should ensure the minimum
human needs of the industrial worker, irrespective of any other
considerations. To calculate the minimum wage, the Committee
124
125
this Tribunal and that this Tribunal was under an obligation to act in accordance
therewith. It was further urged that if the Tribunal could not award a minimum
wage in accordance with the principles laid down in the said resolution it was
Incumbent on the Tribunal to justify the circumstances which prevented it
from the adherence to the said norms. The words of the resolution on which
this submission is founded run as follows :
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The resolution represents the views of the 15th Indian Labour Conference
and is in the main recommendatory. A Labour Conference is not entitled to
give any directions to a Tribunal like the National Industrial Tribunal or to use
the language of dictation or command in connection with such a Tribunal and
it could not possibly have been the intention of the Conference to do so. As
stated in the summary of the proceedings of the 15th Indian Labour Conference,
Shri Shantilal Shah, Minister for Labour and Law of the then State of Bombay
suggested that the Committees Report might be sent only to wage boards
set up by an executive authority and not to those set up by the judicial
authority, It is stated in the summary of the proceedings that the Chairman
explained that Government would have to devise some means to implement
the principles on an agreed basis and to ensure their observance as courts
could not be forced to follow them. The 15th Labour Conference is not a
statutory body. However eminent may be the persons who attended the
Conference, the resolutions passed at the Conference have no binding force.
A reply was sent thereto towards the end of April 1958 by the Secretary
to the Government of India. Department of Expenditure, Ministry of Finance,
explaining the Governments position in the following words :
AI
5.53. It was then urged that this resolution should be regarded as binding,
as it constituted an agreement arrived at between all employers in industry,
including Government, on the one hand, and all the employees in industry on
the other. The resolution passed at this Conference has not been ratified by
any of the Governments concerned, or by the employers Federation and
Organisations. No evidence has been led before me to show that it has been
ratified by workmens organisations.
5.54. The Second Commission of Enquiry on Emoluments and Conditions
of Service of Central Government Employees addressed a letter on 14th
March. 1938 to the Central Government in terms followings :
The Commission wish to know whether the Central Government
now stand committed to the adoption, during the current Five Year
Plan, of a policy of need-based minimum wage, or pay determined
by the norms laid down by the Labour Conference; and if so, whether
the policy applied to the Central Governments own employees, as
well as to others, ** ** ** One of the Clauses of the resolution of the
Conference provides that wherever the minimum wage fixed was
below the norms recommended, it would be incumbent on the
126
5.55. Apart from its binding character, this resolution which has been
unanimously passed by men occupying high responsible positions and
status, is entitled to great weight. For the first time in India, norms have been
crystalised for the purpose of fixation of a need based minimum wage in a
Conference where the participants were drawn from the ranks of Government,
industry and labour. These recommendations represent a landmark in the
struggle of labour for fixation of a minimum wage in accordance with the
needs of the workmen. The resolution lays down what a minimum wage
should be. It recognises that the minimum wage was need-based. It is a
resolution passed in connection with the needs of an industrial worker. The
norms laid down by it are standardized norms applicable to all industrial
workers whatever may be their age and whatever may be the number of years
of service they may have put in. The standard of a working class family has
been laid as comprising 3 consumption units for one earner, the earnings of
women, children and adolescents being disregarded. These three consumption
units are intended to provide for one adult male, one adult female and two
children. This norm has been laid down for the purpose of fixing a minimum
127
wage at all stages in the life of a workman. The norm would be 3 consumption
units at a time when a workman may be unmarried and may have no children
and dependents. This norm is equally applicable at a time when a workman
may have more than two children and other dependants to maintain. This
norm is laid down even when a worker may have an earning wife. It is a
standardized norm representing the average need of a workman having due
regard to various stages in his life. The minimum food requirement on the
basis of a net intake of 2700 calories has been laid down even though human
metabolism is such that after middle age lesser calories would be required
than during the earlier period. The norm in respect of the minimum food
requirements is a norm not based on the actual quantity of food consumed
by workmen in India, but represents the needs of the workmen in connection
with what Dr. Aykroyd considered .was required to be consumed.
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128
5.59. The All India State Bank of India Staff Federation has calculated
the amount payable in accordance with the norms fixed by the 15th Labour
Conference at the working class consumer price Index No. 360 in the Series
1939 = 100, as under :
5.60. Rs. 81 for food, Rs. 9 for clothing, Rs. 12.50 for house rent and Rs.
25.37 in connection with fuel, lighting and miscellaneous expenditure totalling
in all Rs. 127.87.
5.61. The Second Pay Commission has dealt at length with the norms
laid down by the 15th Labour Conference in Chapter VII of its report. In
paragraph 10 it has observed as follows :
Thus it seems to us that more important than the fact of quantitative
definition of minimum remuneration is the content of what is defined;
and an examination of the content and its monetary value shows
(a) that the minimum remuneration worked out according to the
recommended formula may be of the order of Rs. 125 as compared
with Rs. 52.50 which, with some exceptions, is the upper limit of
minimum wages fixed under the law; (b) that it would be about 70
to 80 per cent higher than the rates generally prevailing in the
organised sectors of industry where wages are fixed either by
collective bargaining or through conciliation and adjudication
proceedings; and (c) that it would be well above the highest wages
i.e. Rs. 112 (in cotton textiles industry in Bombay average for
129
Conference, the fair wage would be very much higher. The total remuneration
paid at present to the member of the subordinate staff by D Class Banks in
area IV amounts to Rs. 40.50 in the first year of service and Rs. 77.50 in the
25th year of service at the working class consumer price index No. 123
(1949=100). A Class banks in area I pay by way of basic wage and dearness
allowance and House Rent Rs. 101 to the members of the subordinate staff
in the first year of service and Rs. 133 in the 25th year of service at the
working class consumer price index No. 123 (1949=100).
562. The clerical-staff in banks and the members of the supervisory staff
who are workmen cannot be regarded as being covered by these
recommendations which are applicable to industrial workers. These norms
may at best be applied in connection with the members of the subordinate
staff. The wages in the Banking industry are based on graded scales intended
to provide for the growing needs of the workmen as they advance in service.
The present scales of wages are intended to provide for less than 3
consumption units in the beginning and for larger consumption units in later
years of service.
5.63. The recommendations of this Conference require an enquiry to be
made by wage fixing authorities about the prices of various articles of food
and clothing. As regards Tribunals which have to adjudicate upon disputes
relating to wages for workmen employed in various parts of the country, in
order to arrive at a just conclusion, it would be necessary for them to have
reliable evidence about the prices of various articles of food and clothing,
prevailing at various places at various times of the year for some years before
proper averages could be worked out for the country or for the areas in which
the country may be divided for the purpose of fixation of wages. It would
considerably strain the resources of a party to secure reliable data and lead
evidence about the same which could stand the test of scrutiny.......... .
BE
AI
The Second Pay Commission has thereafter proceeded to consider the norm
of 2700 calories and after having had the benefit of expert opinion on the
subject, came to the conclusion that a considerably less number of calories
is adequate. In paragraph 16 the Second Pay Commission observes as
under:
The minimum remuneration of the order of Rs. 125 stated therein is for the
year 1958. It would be very much more today when the working class
consumer price index has risen from 116 (1949=100) for the year 1958 to
about 126 for the year 1961. Assuming that the figure of Rs. 125 arrived at by
the Second Pay Commission for the year 1958 is correct, the amount of
minimum wage at the present index figure of 128 would be Rs. 138. If this be
the minimum wage contemplated for industrial workers by the 15th Labour
130
131
AI
BE
index numbers should be revised at least once in ten years on the basis of
fresh family budget enquiries. By this standard every one of the series included
in the all-India cost of living index is out-moded and requires to be replaced.
This series was primarily concerned with the needs of labour employed in
factories. The centres included in the series do not by any means form
representative samples of urban areas. The former State of Bombay is
represented by four centres. Uttar Pradesh and Madras are represented by
one centre each. The weighting system adopted is not entirely satisfactory.
It is based mainly on factory labour employed in various centres. The State
average tends to be based in favour of the larger industrial centres. The
weighting pattern is based on the constitution of the provinces as in 1949.
Since then there has been a reorganisation of the State without any alteration
being made in the weighting system. The constitutent series of the all-India
index are complied by different organisations some by the Central
Government and some by the State Governments and the methods adopted
in the compilation of the indices are not always the same. The number of
items covered also varies from centre to centre, but the variations do not
seem to be based on any uniform principles. Housing groups is particularly
deficient in all the available indices and miscellaneous group of items has
considerable variation. The consumption patterns have not remained stationary
since the time, the various family budget inquiries were made in connection
with the aforesaid series.
people. The present all-India working class consumer price index number is
prepared only from the point of view of labour employed in factories. There is
no similar all-India index for the middle class from whose ranks the members
of the clerical staff in the banking industry are principally drawn.
132
5.68. Shri Phadke, however, is unable to point out any substitute for the
series for the purpose of linking the dearness allowance with the rise in the
cost of living. The Second Pay Commission has found it necessary to conclude
that despite the limitations pointed out by it, the all-India working class
consumer price index, currently published is perhaps the only convenient
and suitable tool available for wage adjustments at the national level. The
Labour Appellate Tribunal also in paragraph 106 of its decision has remarked
that the all-India consumer price index provides a suitable anchor for the
movements of future dearness allowance and can be usefully applied for that
purpose As regards the applicability of this index series to the middle class
from which most of the members of the clerical staff are drawn, the Second
Pay Commission has observed that the closeness of the series for the working
class and middle class population in Calcutta compiled by the State
Government suggested that the effect of the difference in the consumption
pattern on the price index is perhaps not as great as is sometimes made out
to be.
5.69. The all-India working class consumer price index is the only available
barometer for the measurement of the pressure of price changes in the country
on an all-India level. It is easy to criticise it but there is no available substitute
for it. It has served a useful purpose in the past and will have to render service
for the present.
(v) Base Year
133
more than 100% neutralisation was implicit in these demands, Shri Sule
expressed himself in favour of fixing the year 1949 as the base year instead
of the year 1956. The All India Bank Employees Federation by its statement
of claim has submitted that the cost of living was not likely to go down to prewar level nor even to 1944 price level. Some of the organisations of workmen
employed in the State Bank of India claimed that basic pay of the employees
should be fixed at the cost of living index number 360 in the series 1939 =
100 when the corresponding number was 101 in the series 1949 = 100.
AI
BE
134
" * * * it is true that for the purpose of wage fixation a particular cost
of living figure has to be taken as the basis of calculation but what
this figure should be must always remain to some extent a matter
of conjecture.
135
envisaged in the fulfilment of the Five Year Plans and the system of deficit
financing, it is not expected in the near or foreseeable future that the all-India
consumer price index number in this series 1949 = 100 will descend to a
level below 100. If a situation does arise when there is such a steep fall in the
cost of living that the index number goes below 100, it may be open to the
parties to ask for a revision of the wage structure.
AI
BE
5.75. While fixing the basic wage in relation to the year 1944, the Sen
Tribunal was guided by the Prime consideration that basic pay should
represent as large a part of the total emoluments as possible. At the time
when the Sen Tribunal was busy devising a wage structure for the bank
employees, the index series which were available were mostly those which
were linked to the year 1944 or there were series which were being published
with base year 1939 which could easily be converted to the base year 1944.
At present the Central Government is publishing the all-India working class
consumer price index series which has the year 1949 as its base. It has
discontinued publication of the series with the year 1944 as its base as the
same was considered to be unsuitable as a permanent basis in view of the
abnormal conditions prevailing during that year. If, therefore, a base year has
to be devised, it cannot be the year 1944. The year 1939 cannot serve as a
base now in view of its distance from the present. All factors favour the
acceptance of the year 1949 as the most suitable year for adopting as a
base year for the purpose of wage fixation and I adopt the same. This will
result in a larger basic pay and a smaller dearness allowance, and the wage
structure will present a more realistic picture. The question relating to the
desirability of merger of a part of the dearness allowance with the basic pay
has been separately dealt with by me later. The objection of the banks to the
merger of any part of the dearness allowance with the basic wage on the
ground of the increase in the burden that may take place in connection with
provident fund and gratuity can be met by suitable provisions which may
prevent increases therein except to the extent intended.
provide for reasonable increments for the growing needs of himself and his
family including children that are likely to be born. Calculating in accordance
with the Lusk co-efficient, the Sastry Tribunal took the view that the
consumption units should be taken at 1.8 at the initial start. The Sastry
Tribunal said that if the generally accepted view that under the Indian conditions
a person has in the 8th year of service a wife and two children should prevail
the consumption units in the 8th year of service will come to 3 but in view of
the statistics placed before it with reference to the employees of certain
banks and the figures which appeared in the census reports it was stated
that quite an appreciable number of people remained unmarried even in the
age group 25 to 30 and that it was only in the age group 30 to 35 that single
man were rare. The Sastry Tribunal considered it more appropriate to take
the 10th year of service as the proper stage in which 3 consumption units
should be allowed.
5.76. The question of pay scales is intimately connected with the question
relating to the number of consumption units for which provision is to be
made thereby.
136
137
cost of living Index figure was 155 whereas in 1938-39 it was 104.
According to these index numbers the cost of living of the same
family would be
103 104
= Rs. 69 in 1938-39. The lowest
155
= Rs. 63.
The family budget enquiry which constitutes one of the pillars on which
this co-efficient rests was started in July 1922 and was completed in August
1924. The total number of family budgets collected was 2000. In addition,
125 single mens budgets were also collected. Out of the 2000 family budgets,
252 were rejected owing to their incompleteness and doubtful accuracy. Only
1748 budgets were accepted for final tabulation. This enquiry was conducted
69 3 by the Labour Office Bombay. It was restricted to middle class persons
having fixed and ascertainable incomes. The enquiry was confined to families
3.29 with an income of not less than Rs. 50 and not more than Rs. 700 per month.
When the tabulation of the data, was, however undertaken, it was found that
the number of budgets in the lower (i.e. below Rs. 75 per mensem) and the
higher (i.e. above Rs. 225 per mensem) income classes were comparatively
few and so in order to make the sample more homogeneous and the results
more representative, it was thought better to deal in the report with the budgets
falling within the income classes of Rs. 75 to Rs. 225 per mensem. Accordingly
1325 out of the 1748 budgets were considered for the purpose of that report.
The classification of these budgets by income classes was as follows :
AI
BE
138
-------------
No. of
families
524
508
293
1325
Percentage
to total
39.6
38.3
22.1
100.0
Percentage expenditure
on each group
139
43.4
5.5
10.4
2.5
14.8
23.4
100.0
From this enquiry conducted in a place like Bombay in the year 1922 24 on the one hand and the Report of the Rau Court of Inquiry appointed in
the year 1940 confined to the staff of the G. I. P. Railway in relation to
investigation concerning the question of dearness allowance on the other, is
built up the co-efficient which is sought to be applied by Industrial Tribunals
in respect of all-India adjudications. Justice Rajadhyaksha himself was
conscious of the difficulties which he was experiencing. In paragraph 148 of
his report, he has stated as follows :
5.84. In dealing with this matter the Labour Appellate Tribunal in paragraph
68 of its decision has observed as follows :
BE
The Central Pay Commission fixed Rs. 90 per mensem as the minimum
wage for middle class employees and Rs. 55 for the subordinate staff. The
co-efficient would work out at about 64 per cent. * * * * It is common knowledge
that the gap between lower middle class and the working class is narrower
now-a-days. In these circumstances, it is proper to hold that the co-efficient
may well be taken to be not more than 66 2/3 per cent. We must, however,
frankly concede that this is merely an approximation by us and we cannot
claim for it a scientific justification on the basis of reliable statistics for the
reason that such statistics are not available."
Food
------------Fuel and lighting
---------Clothing (excludes bedding)
Bedding and household necessaries (includes
beddings, cooking utencils, etc.) ------House Rent
---------Miscellaneous
(including remittances to dependants).
----
AI
Mr. Seervai urged that the co-efficient method was erroneous, that
though the patterns of living keep on changing in both the classes
they do not change in the same direction or to the same extent
and no constant co-efficient would be disclosed by different budget
enquiries. We certainly cannot take the 80% co-efficient as proved
or established because it is derived from a so-called casual relation
between the expenditure of a working class family and the
expenditure of a middle class family as disclosed by family budget
enquiries. It is but a single incident and we cannot say whether the
relationship is casual or a mere co-incidence, a chance
correspondence between two sets of figures. In Mr. Seervais view
with no subsequent enquiries to confirm or it may be to contradict
we cannot accept the 80 per cent co-efficient as established. Thus
the principle of the co-efficient threatened to become more and
more vague and more and more of a guess-work. Even the attempt
140
"It occurs to us that if in fact the gap between the income of the
lower middle class on the one hand and the working class on the
other has been narrowed by increases in the laters wages the
more appropriate inference would be that the wages of the lower
middle class have not received increases to which they were entitled.
In so far as the basic wages are concerned, in the case of many
commercial firms the co-efficient is a good deal higher than 1.80;
and even if we take the total emoluments in the major industries in
Bombay or Calcutta the co-efficient would be found generally to be
not less than 1.80. The Central Pay Commission too seems to
have accepted the 1.80 co-efficient; for while it gave to the
subordinate staff a starting basic salary of Rs. 30 it fixed the wages
of the clerk at the initial stage at Rs. 55 which means a co-efficient
of 1.80. It was therefore unwise of the Sastry Tribunal in the absence
of statistics to negative a co-efficient which has been so generally
accepted ** we are clearly for the view that in the absence of any
definite investigation or statistics the 1.80 co-efficient should be
maintained; for it has been an accepted co-efficient adopted after
deliberation and has not been displaced by any organized enquiries.
141
5.88. The Indian Banks Association has submitted that the co-efficient
method was erroneous in that though the pattern of living kept on changing in
both classes they did not change in the same direction or to the same extent
and there could be no constant co-efficient. It denied that for middle class
employees the co-efficient could not be less than 120% and also disputed
the correctness of 80% as a proper co-efficient.
5.89. The Bombay Exchange Banks Association has pleaded that the
very concept of co-efficient should disappear. It also denied that it had now
been universally accepted that considerable co-efficient had to be added in
the case of middle class employees to the cost of living calculated for the
industrial worker. The State Bank of India has submitted that it would be an
extremely illusory and incorrect method to arrive at the wages of middle
class employees by a process of arithmatical calculation, viz. by applying a
co-efficient. The Northern India Banks Association has submitted that no
mechanical formula such as that of 80% or 120% co-efficient would satisfy
the test of either equity or practicability. It agreed that there should be some
difference between the wages of unskilled workers in the banks such as
peons and those belonging to clerical cadre. It has stated that the only way
of equitably determining the difference was to compare the total emoluments
of these two classes with those of corresponding workers in other comparable
establishments in the same areas.
BE
5.86. The All India Bank Employees Association has pleaded that it did
not accept the Rajadhyaksha co-efficient of 80% as adequate and that it was
of the opinion that for middle class employees the co-efficient cannot be less
than 120%. It has further added that even if 80% per cent was accepted as a
proper co-efficient the bare minimum wage for a middle class employee would
be higher by this percentage. The Association has stated that it has been
admitted by all the adjudicators that the minimum wage of a middle class
employee should be substantially higher than that of a subordinate employee.
It has pleaded that this difference was mainly to account for the cost of
education, skill acquired, the multifarious social obligations and the
characteristic ways of living of a middle class employee that a middle class
employee was called upon to meet along with higher responsibilty, obligations
which an industrial worker was usually never called upon to meet and that it
has been now universally accepted that a considerable co-efficient has to be
added in the case of middle class employee to the cost of living calculated
for the industrial worker.
The All India Bank of Baroda Employees Federation has pleaded that the
need of a clerical employee has been estimated according to all expert opinions
at varying degrees and the Federation felt that 70% higher wages should be
fixed for a clerk than those of a subordinate.
AI
5.87. The All India State Bank of India Staff Federation and the State
Bank of India Staff Union, Andhra Pradesh, have pleaded that the minimum
cost of living of a middle class family is much higher than that of a working
class family, that the cost of education has risen to abnormal proportion and
parents have to expend considerably on the education higher secondary and
college of their children, that the expenditure on clothing by employees
recruited to the ministerial and skilled cadres is far higher than that in a
working class family, as such employees are required to appear neatly dressed
in the office and maintain decency and decorum in dealing with the public,
that the miscellaneous expenditure in the family budget of middle class
employees is considerable and is far in excess of that in a working class
family and that the minimum wage for a clerk was to be obtained by multiplying
the minimum wage of the lowest paid worker by the Co-efficient of 1.80. The
South Gujarat Bank of Baroda Employees Union has stated as under :
To find out the minimum requirements of a middle class employee
on the above basis, we have to put them approximately @ 70%
above the standard of a worker. It has been admitted by several
authorities that this difference should be 80% but we felt to scale
down the difference and to put it at 70%.
142
5.90. Shri Phadke has strongly criticised this 80 per cent co-efficient
and the foundation thereof. This formula rests on the findings of the Rau
Court of Enquiry constituted in the year 1940 in connection with a working
class family of 3 consumption units requiring Rs. 35 in Bombay City by way
of minimum subsistence. In paragraph 75 of the report of the Rau Court of
Enquiry itself, a note of caution has been sounded in the following terms :
..... in order to determine what classes of employees should be
granted a dearness allowance, it is necessary for us to draw, roughly
and with the aid of such materials as may be readily available,
what has been called a poverty line, between incomes that are
above subsistence level and incomes that are not. For this limited
purpose, no great precision is required : the amount of the dearness
allowance we propose to recommend is comparatively small and
even if we are in drawing the line, whether on one side or the other,
the error is not likely to cause grave inconveniences. We shall, of
course, endeavour to do our best with the materials at our disposal;
but further materials may show that our estimates are too high or
too low. We only wish to emphasize that these estimates,
143
103 104
=
155
BE
Rs. 69 in 1938-39. The index figures viz. 155 and 104 have been taken from
two different index number series. The figure of 155 is taken from the series
which was started with the year 1914 as the base year. The other figure viz.
104 has been taken from the series started in 1933-34.
5.95 Where proper inquiries have been conducted into the needs of both
the working class and the middle class, it does not become necessary to
resort to any co-efficient. It is only when material exists about one class and
not the other, that it becomes necessary to resort to a co-efficient. In the
present state of the record, I am unable to arrive at any co-efficient myself
and cannot see my way to effect any changes in the existing co-efficients
which may be regarded as substantial whilst considering the total emoluments
of different classes of workmen employed in A, B and C Classes of banks in
Areas I, II and III under this award.
5.91. This co-efficient is also founded on the middle class family budget
enquiry held in the year 1922/24. In order to correlate the findings of different
inquiries held at different times in connection with different classes of men
the figure of Rs. 103-4-0 being the average expenditure of a middle class
family in the lowest income group having income between Rs. 75 and Rs.
125 per month in the years 1922/24 has been projected to the year 1938-39.
It is stated in the Rajadhyaksha award that the cost of living index figure in
1923 was 155 whereas in 1938-39 it was 104 and that according to these
AI
5.92. Shri Phadke has criticised the accuracy of this method of conversion
stating that to arrive at the correct results, it would be necessary not merely
to have the same basket of commodities, but the same pattern of consumption,
that in fact, the quantities for the two series were not the same, that the
pattern of consumption for the base year had changed and that the 1914
series was a series prior to the first world war while the 1933-34 series had
been formulated after the great depression which had occurred in the thirties.
He submitted that the comparison of these figures could not possibly yield
any intelligible results. He pointed out that while the Labour Appellate Tribunal
decision laid down that the co-efficient should be 80% while fixing wage
scales for the subordinate staff and the clerical staff this co-efficient of 80%
was not adhered to. Statements have been filed before me showing that the
co-efficient varies from stage to stage, from class to class and from area to
area.
5.93. In the year of grace 1962 this Tribunal is in no better position than
the earlier Tribunals who have dealt with the matter. The inherent infirmities in
this co-efficient have been pointedly referred to before me. I am not at all
certain whether I would be very much wiser by an enquiry which may be
conducted at present. Expenditure is conditioned by the income received by
the class of persons whose expenditure is being considered. By and large,
over a period of time, expenditure cannot exceed the income. The only pattern
which such inquiry may reveal may be a pattern based on the income of the
144
5.96. The ingredients of a pay scale generally are its minimum and
maximum, the span, that is the period of time requisite to reach the maximum,
the increments provided and the efficiency bar where imposed.
(viii) Ratio between the Minimum and Maximum In Pay Scales
5.97. It is nobodys case that there should be a uniform pay for the
workmen employed in banks from the commencement till the conclusion of
their service. There, is however, a controversy as regards the ratio which
should subsist between the minimum in the scale and the maximum thereof.
5.98. In the Sen Award the difference between the minimum and the
maximum basic wage for clerical staff may be taken to be about 1:3 while for
subordinate staff it may be taken to be about 1:1.5.
5.99. In the Sastry Award as modified the ratio of minimum basic pay
and maximum basic pay for clerks in A Class banks in Area I is 1:3.3. In
other classes of banks also it is by about the same. As regards the subordinate
staff the ratio for A Class banks in Area 1 is 1:1.8 and for other classes of
banks it is about 1:2.
5.100. The All India Bank Employees Association has claimed that so
far as the clerical staff is concerned the difference between the minimum
and maximum in the same grade should be approximately 2 times. In the
case of the subordinate staff from the pay scales demanded it appears that
the ratio between the minimum and the maximum is required to be 1:2. The
Indian Banks Association has contended that there is no cogent reason
given why the difference between the minimum and the maximum in the
145
same grade should be approximately 2 times for the celrical staff. The
Bombay Exchange Banks Association has also taken the same stand as
the Indian Banks Association.
(ix) Span
5.103. I shall next deal with the question of Span.
BE
5.109. The Northern India Banks Association has stated that ordinarily
a bank clerk starts his career at the age of 18 to 21 and as the retirement age
for him has been fixed, under the existing Award, at 58, the scales framed
should extend for a period of at least 35 years, for if the maximum is reached
earlier, a sense of discontent and dissatisfaction is needlessly produced at a
time when the employee has yet to go many years.
AI
5.104. The span of incremental scales of pay fixed by the Sen Award
was 25 years. The span provided by the Sastry Award is also 25 years for
both the clerical and the subordinate staff.
5.105. The All India Bank Employees Association has demanded that
the span should be 20 years for both the clerical and subordinate staff. It has
demanded separate scales of pay for workmen discharging duties of a
supervisory nature with a span of 9 years.
5.110. The banks on the whole, have opposed the employees demand
in this connection.
5.111. In support of the contention that the span should be 20 years,
reliance has been placed on behalf of the employees on some of the awards
where the span has been 20 years, and on the award in Burma Shell Refineries,
where the span has been reduced from 20 years to 16 years (Industrial Court
Reporter, October 1958 issue page 1067). It was also stated that there were
cases where the span was still shorter.
5.108. The Indian Banks Association has in its reply, stated that 25
years is the normal span of incremental scales for employees in the country
and that the same should be retained. It has submitted that this Tribunal has
no jurisdiction to lay down any term or conditions of service including scales
of emoluments for those employed in a supervisory capacity who draw
emoluments exceeding Rs. 500 per mensem or who exercise either by the
nature of the duties attached to the office or by reason of the powers vested
5.113. Shri Phadke on behalf of the Indian Banks Association urged that
if the maximum in the scale of pay was reached at an early stage, it would
cause a sense of frustration among the workmen for number of years of their
lives when they stagnate having reached the maximum in the span and that
it would result in loss of efficiency and indifference to work. He urged that if a
workman after joining service had to remain in service for 35 years, he would,
for over 15 years, not receive any increment at all and that 15 years was an
5.106. The All India Bank of Baroda Employees Federation has claimed
that in every class of bank for each category of employees there should be a
graded scale of pay with a span of 20 years.
146
147
AI
BE
unduly long period of time during which an employee should get no increments
at all. The number of years during which he might not receive any increment
may even be greater where a workman joins early and superannuates at the
age of 58. He further urged that the reduction in span would increase the
establishment charges of banks, as the provident fund contribution would be
proportionately higher. He urged that the basic wage structure was one
integrated whole and every aspect of it whether visible or not on the face of it
was inextricably connected with the other and that the real value of the wage
structure depended upon the total effect of these inter-acting aspects so that
any material change in one was liable to lead to a change in the whole. He
stated that the Sastry Tribunal and the Labour Appellate Tribunal had in mind
a 25 years scale and the liabilities to be imposed on the bankers included a
25 years span as a salient feature of the scale. He summed up his argument
by saying that with the result of the reduction of the span, the cost to the
banks would be higher, the return to the banks by way of efficiency in work
may be lesser and there was bound to be some element of discontentment
in the minds of senior employees for want of increments. He filed a statement
showing the financial implications of shortening the span of a scale of pay
from 25 years to 20 years on the footing that the existing minimum and the
maximum would continue unchanged. The statement shows that it would
result in an increase of total emoluments by 7.2 per cent.
(2)
(x) Increments
5.117. While considering the pay scales the Sen Tribunal observed that
increments should normally show a rising trend. The Sastry Tribunal has
stated the following in respect of increments :
"A time scale of wages with annual increments is now recognised
to be the normal pattern of a wage scale. It is no longer necessary
to give elaborate reasons in justification of this system. The growing
needs of the workmens family, the greater experience and improved
148
The Labour Apellate Tribunal slightly altered this direction of the Sastry Tribunal
by directing that the general stoppage may only be allowed if the ratio of
gross profits to working funds of the previous year is less than 50 percent of
the average of similar ratios in the four immediately preceding years.
149
5.119. The All India Bank Employees Association submitted that the
increments in the grades should be automatic and that part-time employees
should also be granted 50 per cent of the rate of increment annually as
demanded for a full time incumbent. The banks have in general opposed
these demands. The Northern India Banks Association has replied by saying
that the grant of increments should not be automatic but should rest on the
record of the work done by the employees during the year and the management
should have the right to withhold the increment if the work of the employee
falls below a certain standard. The Jaya Laxmi Bank is against automatic
grant of increments in the grade scales and considers that should depend
upon the efficiency of the employee concerned and the management must
have a right to review the work of each employee while the question of annual
increment is being considered.
5.123. The next question that arises for consideration is that relating to
efficiency bar.
(xi) Efficiency Bar
5.124 The Sen Award in paragraph 112 provided for one efficiency bar at
a fairly late stage in an employees career. It directed than an efficiency bar
should be placed between the seventeenth and the eighteenth year of service
in the case of all employees. It observed that efficiency bars existed in
government service and had been inserted in nearly all awards relating to
scales of pay made by Industrial Courts and Tribunals.
5.125. In the Sastry Award an efficiency bar has been placed at the 20th
year of service of an employee both in the clerical grade and the subordinate
grade. In the opinion of the Sastry Tribunal it was sufficient to have one
efficiency bar in an employees career.
AI
BE
Appellate Tribunal.
5.121. The directions given by the Sastry Tribunal are fair. They have
also been considered by the Labour Appellate Tribunal and apart from the
amendment already referred to they have been retained.
5.122. I have considered the total emoluments received by workman
throughout the span period and in fixing pay scales and providing increments
I have taken all relevant factors into consideration. As regards the granting
stoppage and the withholding of increments I give the same directions as
those given by the Sastry Tribunal as modified by the decision of the Labour
150
We are not prepared to ignore the fact that right down from the
time of the Islington Commission, all responsible authorities have
regarded the principle of the efficiency bar as an indispensable part
of the time-scale system, if it is to work satisfactorily .......
151
(d)
(e)
5.130. The Bombay Exchange Banks Association has pleaded that the
question of a workmans needs and the question of his efficiency were entirely
different concepts. It has pleaded that if the workmen was lulled into the
belief that he need not worry about his efficiency being tested and assessed
throughout his career and that he would continue to the end of his scale
irrespective of his efficiency, a bank would not have a good employee in him.
It is submitted that so far as a bank is concerned, in the absence of an
efficiency bar, in the event of the bank coming to the conclusion that the
workman was inefficient, it would have no option but to dispense with his
service whereas if there was an efficiency bar, the workman may be kept at
the stage of the bar until his efficiency improved rather than have his service
dispensed with. It is further submitted that there should be two efficiency
bars in both the clerical and subordinate grades, one in the earlier part of the
scale (say, 5th or 10th year), and the other in the second or later part of the
scale (say, 15th or 20th year.)
BE
5.127. The Second Pay Commission has provided for two efficiency
bars. The Second Pay Commission in imposing the efficiency bars has
observed that it was ordinarily through efficiency bars that a practical
discrimination between satisfactory and unsatisfactory workers could be made
and that they had, therefore, usually provided an efficiency bar somewhere
about the 10th year in scales which were to run for more than 15 years or so
and a second efficiency bar at a later stage in scales which were to run for 20
years or longer.
The Labour Appellate Tribunal saw no reason to exclude the members of the
subordinate staff from the operation of the efficiency bar.
AI
5.128. On behalf of the workmen a claim has been made that increments
in the grades should be automatic and that there should not be any efficiency
bars whatsoever. It is contended that the scales are formulated on the basis
of needs of the employees, that the needs grow with the passing of time and
that with the passing of time the employees skill and intelligence grow to
the advantage of the employer. It is submitted that the efficiency bar was
unnecessary in view of the fact that the employees after putting in considerable
length of service gain both experience and efficiency and that the efficiency
bar laid down at the end of 21 years of service in the last awarded scale was
of no use, as at the end of so many years, no question of efficiency could
justifiably arise. It is also stated that efficiency bar might be used to the
detriment of the employees. It was therefore, submitted that no efficiency bar
at any stage be put.
5.129. The Indian Banks Association has submitted that it was erroneous
to assume that the skill and intelligence of employees grew to the advantage
of the employer with passage of time. It has further pleaded that the
management should have the right to see that the workmen keep up the
normal standard of efficiency and not lapse into indifference and inefficiency
because of the assured prospect of an incremental scale. It is further pleaded
that the provision in the Sastry Award for only one efficiency bar at the end of
the 20th year of service had been found to be inadequate and ineffective. It is
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5.131. The State Bank of India has pleaded that it would be a retrograde
step to abolish efficiency bars as the existence of such bars was in the
interest of both the employer and the employees.
5.132. The Northern India Banks Association has submitted that the
efficiency bar as prescribed under the existing award was absolutely necessary
to ensure continued efficiency and that the management should have the
right to withhold increments if the work of the employee fell below a certain
standard.
5.133. The Catholic Syrian Bank Ltd. has submitted that in the ordinary
course of events efficiency was sure to deteriorate when the remuneration
was beyond the control of the management.
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5.134. In the course of the hearing Shri Phadke on behalf of the Indian
Banks Association emphasised the need for an efficiency bar at the early
stages of an employees career and stated that if an efficiency bar was kept
at an early stage, then there was a possibility of securing improvement in the
work of an employee.
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in the country to pay. After considering the various aspects of the matter, the
Supreme Court has, at pages 92 and 93 of the aforesaid report, observed as
follows :
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The Supreme Court has observed in an earlier paragraph that in a given case
it may be even permissible to divide the industry into appropriate classes and
then deal with the capacity of the industry to pay class-wise. The industry of
banking, in cases where the banks have branches in more States than one,
has been dealt with class-wise, and the capacity of the industry which, so far
as the banks before me are concerned, has to be determined class wise.
Having regard to the principles enunciated by the Supreme Court, the capacity
of the industry considered class-wise will have to be determined after taking
a fair cross section of each class. As observed by the Sastry Tribunal the
wage structure should be such as to be within the capacity of the Industry to
bear in the light not apply of its present position, but of its future possibilities
also.
5.138. The industry of banking does not produce goods but produces
services. It is an extremely important service which is rendered by banks and
on the continued and efficient functioning of banks depends the smooth
functioning of a large number of other industries in the country. In order that
the economy of the country may develop and other industries may function
smoothly, it is necessary that the industry of banking should also develop to
meet the growing needs of the country. Banking has to be regarded as a
public service and its activity to a certain extent is being regulated in the
public interest. There are various provisions in the Banking Companies Act,
1949, and in the Reserve Bank of India Act relating to the regulation and
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5.139. The stability of the industry depends upon the over-riding factor of
credit. The banks are very often described as delicate instruments of credit.
The failure of the bank has its repercussions on the other banks and on the
deposits made with other banks. Great care is required to inspire the
confidence of the public. Deposits received by the banks constitute, to a very
large extent, the raw material for providing advances to persons needing the
same. A bank unlike a manufacturing concern obtains a very large proportion
of its working funds from the depositors and only a small proportion from its
shareholders. In considering the claims of employees, the claims of the
depositors and other constituents of the bank have also to be kept in mind.
control of the industry in the larger interest of the country. Banks have to
work in a more or less rigid framework set by law. The depositing and investing
public always plays for safety for its deposits and stability for its investments.
Prudent banker not merely provide for what are sometimes known as secret
or undisclosed reserves but provide for easy liquidity of some of its assets in
order to meet any emergency. They also consider the advisibility of following
the policy of maintaining stable dividends. Every effort has to be made to
gather the confidence of the public and the depositors so that the working
funds and operations of the banks may grow.
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5.141. Banking is one of the key industries in the country. The successful
implementation of the Third Five Year Plan depends to a considerable extent
on the successful operation of banking in the country. It is requisite that the
available resources of the country should be harnessed for the successful
implementation of the Third Five Year Plan. Banks have an important role to
play in moblising the resources of the country and canalizing them to
productive purposes. It is necessary that the banking habit should spread
throughout the length and breadth of the country so that the unused wealth of
the country is not merely gathered but is put to effective use. The dependence
of commerce upon banking has in modern times become exceedingly great
and matters have reached a stage where the cessation for some length of
time of banking activity may paralyse to some extent the economic life of the
nation. Bankers issue credit. Large transactions are effected by means of
cheques rather than by the exchange of currency. Banks assist the industrial
undertakings by underwriting their debentures and shares and occasionally
finance the purchase of real property. Banks serve as custodians of stocks
and shares and other valuables. Imports into and exports out of the country
are financed by banks and documents relating to the goods so imported and
exported pass through the hands of the bankers. They have to deal with
warehouse warrants, bills of leading, railway receipts, bills of exchange, marine
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stagnation which was broken in the year 1955 from which year onwards
deposits began to rise progressively and between 1949 and 1958 the volume
of total deposits had nearly doubled. They further submit that the ratio of
bank credit to industry in India rose from 34.7 per cent of the total credits in
June 1953 to 46.2 per cent in April 1959. As regards the State Bank of India,
they have submitted that the State Bank of India occupied a unique place in
the Indian banking industry, that by its age, its resources, its size, its business
and its reputation it enjoyed an unrivalled position in the banking system of
the country, that the total deposits of the State Bank of India which stood at
Rs. 188.0 crores in June 1955 had steadily risen to Rs. 615.0 crores in April
1960 and formed 31.9 per cent of the total deposits of all scheduled banks in
India as compared to 19.1 per cent in June 1955, that the banks advances
(including bills) which amounted to Rs. 110.00 crores in June 1955, steadily
went up to Rs. 185.3 crores in June 1959, that in April 1960 the banks
advances had risen to the record level of Rs. 211.9 crores, when they formed
18.8 per cent of the total advances of all scheduled banks as compared to
18.9 per cent at the end of the busy season of 1954-55 and that the banks
investments in Government securities rose from Rs. 87.0 crores in June
1955 to Rs. 297.4 crores in June 1959. They have further submitted that the
future of the banking industry was very bright.
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BE
during the 2nd Plan period, that the progress from 1954 in the banking industry
was tremendous, that there was no reason to consider that this progress
would not be maintained in future that during these five years the banks
earnings as well as profits had almost doubled, that from 1956 to 1959
expansion in banks credit was of the magnitude of about fifty percent that
the pattern of planned development to which the Indian economy was
committed would enable the banks to earn more deposits and consequently
more profits, that the average of the big banks dividends for the last five
years amounted to 14 per cent, that some of the banks had issued bonus
shares- out of the reserves, that the deposits of all banks in India in 1954
were Rs. 960.37 crores, in 1955 were Rs. 1043.80 crores, in 1956 were Rs.
1125.10 crores, in 1957 were Rs. 1346.60 crores, in 1958 were Rs. 1562.20
crores and in 1959 were Rs. 1815.35 crores, that the ratio of establishment
charges to gross earnings had decreased, that under the Banking Companies
Act the banks had been given the right to show income after making provision
for bad and doubtful debts and other usual and necessary provisions and as
such it was not possible for anyone to ascertain exactly what their actual
earnings were, that it was possible for the banking industry to pay to the
employees what was demanded in the Charter of Demands submitted by the
All India Bank Employees Association and at the same time, to make profits,
pay dividend and build up reserves, both open and secret, that whatever
difficulties if any, the banking industry was facing, were due to
mismanagement of the vested interests controlling the banks and that the
remedy for such difficulties was to put more restrictions on the activities of
banks management and ultimately to nationalise the whole of the banking
industry in the interest of the countrys economy. The All India Bank Employees
Federation has submitted that the financial position of the banks as a whole
was extremely sound.
5.145. The All India State Bank of India Staff Federation and the State
Bank of India Staff Union, Andhra Pradesh, in their statement of claim have
pleaded that the resources of the Indian Banking system were expanding at
a fast rate, making it a dynamic instrument for financing the development of
the economy of the country, that this development has emerged from the
phase of inflation which the country has been witnessing for some years,
that price inflation had been an element in accelerating capital formation and
the expansion of banking system, which in turn, was aided by the process of
inflation as an important factor in financing economic development, that an
important index of the healthy growth of the banking system and of the steadily
increasing banking habit was the ratio of bank deposits to the currency in
circulation and that Indias ratio improved between 1950 and 1959 from 0.70
to 1.03. As regards deposits, they submit that there were three noteworthy
trends. There was a sudden fall in the volume of deposits from the year 1948
to 1949, the contraction in the total deposits being of the order of approximately
Rs. 100 crores; from 1949 to 1954 the volume of deposits was in a state of
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denied that during the period of five years the banks represented by it have
doubled their earnings and profits. It has stated that the employees have
attempted to paint a very rosy picture and have suggested an era of huge
bank profits by merely referring to figures of bank deposits ignoring other
relevant factors and materials which alone could present a true and complete
picture in its proper perspective. It has pointed out that 67% of the Indian
Scheduled Banks have not been able to strengthen their position considering
that they have reserves which are less than their paid up capital, 40% of the
said banks having reserves less than even 50% of such capital. It has further
stated that it was misleading to state that the dividends to the shareholders
of the banks are at the rate of 14%. It has also submitted that a mere rise in
profits of the banks was no justification for granting higher emoluments to the
employees since the need to make proper allocations out of such profits in
the interest of stability and safety of the industry could not be ignored.
5.150. The Northern India Banks Association has pleaded that banking
industry is subject to numerous well-known risks, such as losses arising
from depression in Trade and Industry, fluctuations in the value of Government
and other Stock Exchange securities and losses due to frauds on the part of
the borrowers, clients and members of the staff. It has further stated that the
fact that investors in industries have generally reaped much large profits than
investors in bank shares, not only in India but all over the world, shows that
real banking profits bear no comparison to profits in industry, if the relative
investment of capital is taken as a basis for the measurement of profits. It
has pointed out that as a result of the partition of the country banks which
had activities in areas now forming part of West Pakistan, suffered very heavy
losses, with the result that some of them had to write off not only the reserves
but also the major part of their capital (varying from 50 per cent to 100 per
cent) apart from losses which they had to transfer to their depositors. The
Association submits that the banking industry was not a productive industry
but only a conservative industry and by the very nature of its activities,
being the core of the financial system, it had invest a large percentage of its
funds in Government securities which investment had resulted in lot of
depreciation as borne out by the experience of the past years. It further
points out that banking is an industry for the conservation of the nations
resources and it is subject to upheavals caused by war pestilence and
Government deficit financing to an extent unknown to productive units of
industry. The banks had also to keep their investments diversified and thus in
working out the real paying capacity of the banking industry, large sums had
to be earmarked as provision for losses caused by change in money rates
and by political or natural calamities which might occur at long intervals. The
Association has submitted that the banking industry as a whole could not
bear any further increase in the wage bill and that it would be difficult for the
banks to meet their rapidly increasing establishment charges based on the
automatic operation of the time scale of increments in the existing award and
the consequent increase in the dearness allowance, house allowance,
provident fund contributions, bonus, gratuity, etc. It has observed that there
was no doubt that since 1954 the deposits of the banks have increased as
also their gross earnings. It has pointed out that the increase in the net
earnings, owing to a rapid increase in establishment charges and other items
of expenditure had not however been such, as to enable the banks, after
making provisions which prudence dictates and which the law wisely
envisages, to step up the dividends substantially. It further says that heavy
establishment charges were one of the very important contributing factors to
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5.149. The Bombay Exchange Banks Association has stated that the
Exchange Banks did not plead incapacity to pay reasonable wages. It points
out that banking is a labour intensive occupation, establishment costs forming
the major part of working expenses. It has denied that the progress from
1954 to date has been tremendous. It has further stated that the profits
made up to date were moderate, that it would be unrealistic merely to refer to
earnings and profits without at the same time considering the increase in
cost and expenses particularly establishment charges and that the
establishment expenses of the foreign scheduled banks have risen at a much
faster pace than their profits. It has pointed out that banks have to maintain
large reserves to ensure that the depositors interest are safeguarded and to
avoid the possibility of a serious monetary crisis and that statutory provisions
had been enacted in respect of reserve funds and of compulsory deposits
with the Reserve Bank of India mainly for these purposes. It further points out
that if a healthy dividend was not maintained, it would be reflected in the
market price of the shares and would affect the depositors confidence with
serious repercussions on the banks resulting in fall of deposits and contraction
of business with consequential effect on employment. It has submitted that
the claim made by the workmen that the future of the banking industry and
at least the picture of the coming five to seven years can be foretold, was
extraordinary, naive, optimistic and incorrect. It further points out that overall
level of bank deposits depends primarily on the volume and velocity of currency
in circulation which is determined by the Governments economic, monetary
and fiscal policies. It further states that there was no doubt that the spread
of the banking habit had led to a higher level of deposits, but in the ultimate
analysis, over a long period, the growth must depend on the factors outlined
above. It has submitted that with greater and greater control by the Reserve
Bank of India, it was impossible to postulate what the profit position would be
in the near future and that it was not correct to merely take into account the
rise in profits ignoring the rise in working expenses. It denied that if the
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5.151. The State Bank of India in its reply, has stated that its major
shareholder is the Reserve Bank of India which ploughed back a major portion
of the dividends payable to it particularly to finance the State Bank in meeting
a portion of the losses incurred by the new branches opened by the State
Bank as also by those opened or to be opened by the State Banks
Subsidiaries in rural and semi-urban areas. The State Bank denied that the
finances of the State Bank would not be affected even if all the demands of
workmen were conceded in full. It stated that if the demands were met fully,
it would involve the State Bank in an additional expenditure of Rupees five
crores or thereabouts per annum only in respect of its workmen staff in India.
the inability of the banks to give satisfaction to the shareholders and that in
the case of many of the member banks, the handicap of losses, resulting
solely from the partition of the country, had been such as to have made a
distribution of any dividend impossible since 1947. It points out that out of 35
banks adversely affected on account of displacement from West Pakistan,
only 14 had been able to survive and out of these, only 3 had been able to pay
dividends and these too, after missing the same for several years. It further
submits that the really important thing was not the increase in bank deposits,
but the effect that the increase has in net earnings of banking institutions,
and judging from the increase in reserves and distribution of dividends, this
increase could not be deemed, by any test, as exceptional. It points out that
the net profits of most banks had not been enough to enable them, over the
years, to raise their statutory reserves to the level of their paid-up capital, and
that some of the banks had not been able even to write off depreciation in
their investment in Government and other stock exchange securities. It refers
to the absence of any provision or wholly inadequate provision by most banks
in respect of the accumulated liability on account of gratuity and/or the
retirement benefits due to the employees even under the existing award.
5.152. The State Bank has submitted that if the Tribunal took the view
that the employees had established a case of changed circumstances, it
should also be borne in mind that the State Bank was by Statute required to
do what other commercial banks would not think it advisable to do, namely,
opening branches in rural and semi-rural areas, that the State Bank, in the
national interest, has to encourage and support small scale industries, cooperative institutions, etc., by providing cheaper finance and that the State
Bank through a network of its branches has also to take over Government
treasuries and sub-treasuries and deal with Government transactions as agent
of the Reserve Bank.
After pointing out these, the Association states that although the deposits of
the banks may show a rise, the earning capacity had fallen, and that during
the last four years, its member banks had not made any more progress so
as to enable them to meet any additional burden, but on the contrary, their
earning capacity had been reduced. The Association has submitted that the
problems of the banks in Kerala State would have to be treated on a special
basis as they could not be put on par with banks operating in the rest of
India.
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163
ratio should not exceed sixty per cent and that on compliance with the same
there would be a substantial reduction in the profits. It further points out that
the Reserve Bank had required that the security on landed property should
not exceed twenty per cent of the total advance of sixty per cent and that the
same would result in reduction of profits and that any additional financial
burden at this stage was sure to upset the working of the banks.
Hindustan Commercial Bank Limited has submitted that the bank was not in
a position to shoulder larger financial burden in the shape of increased
emoluments to the workmen of the bank and prayed that no additional burden
be imposed on the bank.
5.157. In connection with the question of banks capacity to pay
reasonable wages, the Bombay Exchange Banks Association on behalf of
its 12 member banks reached an understanding on 18th August 1960 with
the All India Bank Employees Association in Miscellaneous Application No.
10 of 1960 made by the All India Bank Employees Association for directions
for production of certain documents. A reference to the said understanding
has been made in words following :
The All India Bank Employees Association do not press their
above application for production of documents, etc., against the
various Exchange Banks concerned in the reference ***** on the
understanding that the Exchange Banks do not plead incapacity
to pay reasonable wages as may be awarded by the Tribunal.
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5.156. The National Bank of Lahore has submitted that the picture painted
by the All India Bank Employees Association of the prosperity of the banking
industry was more or less an illusory one. It has submitted that any further
increase in the wage bill would result in the imposition of an unbearable
burden on the industry. The Bharatha Lakshmi Bank Limited has submitted
that the bank had not been able to pay dividend for the last 11 years as its
profits were insufficient and any greater burden placed on it would surely
result in depletion of capital. It has submitted that any increase in salary
disproportionate to the resources and the capacity of banks would spell ruin
of small banks. In connection with the statement that from 1954 onwards the
banking industry has made tremendous progress in all directions and
increased their earnings and profits, the bank has submitted that this was
one phase; that a large number of banks had gone out of existence during
that period was the other phase of development in the banking industry and
that it was unwise to consider one phase and ignore the other. The Gadodia
Bank has referred to the grave circumstances and acute problems which
banks had to face on account of growing legislative control and the rising
cost of operation without any corresponding increase in income or
improvement in productivity. The bank has submitted that the Indian banking
in its role as resource mobiliser and credit purveyor for the economy of the
country, could best play its part only when it was not saddled with more
expenses than what it had to pay in the present circumstances and that the
banks capacity to pay more was out of question. It has further submitted
that the grades which were fixed by the Sastry Award were the maximum
that were warranted by the capacity of banks to pay or even by the economic
condition of the country. The Vijaya Bank has submitted that it would be
impossible for it to bear any additional burden on account of increase in the
salary or on account of increase in the dearness allowance or other allowances
to be paid to its employees. The Miraj State Bank has submitted that the
financial position of the bank was very weak and that the bank did not have
capacity to pay any higher wages or to afford any better conditions of work
than those that were now made available to the workmen by the bank. The
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5.158. There are numerous statements which have been filed on behalf
of the employers and the employees in connection with the paying capacity
of the banks on various footings.
5.159. The Indian Banks Association at the time of the hearing pointed
out that the banks would be required to pay a considerable amount by way of
premia to the Deposit Insurance Corporation in connection with the scheme
of insurance in respect of deposits made by depositors. A statement has
been filed by the Indian Banks Association showing that its A Class member
banks would have to pay insurance premia varying from Rs. 1,40,632/- to Rs.
9,78,108/- its B Class member banks would have to pay premia varying from
Rs. 41,366 to Rs. 98,084 and its C Class member banks would have to pay
premia varying from Rs. 6,560/- to Rs. 34,561/-. The State Bank of India has
filed a statement showing that at the provisional rate of 5 N.P. per Rs. 100/per annum the State Bank of India would have to pay approximately a premium
of Rs. 13.86 lacs.
5.160. The Balance Sheets and Profit and Loss accounts of banks have
been filed before me. A statement has also been filed showing the effect on
the profits of a number of banks if a 10 per cent overall increase in emoluments
takes place. The Indian Banks Association has exhibited a letter, dated 17th
June, 1961 written by the Deputy Economic Adviser of the Reserve Bank of
India to the Indian Banks Association containing certain proposals made by
the Reserve Bank of India for strengthening the capital funds of banks and
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166
1047 crores
1186 crores
1318 crores
1474 ,crores
1566 crores.
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It is also stated in the said letter that the further fast pace of expansion
in deposits, advances, etc., during recent years as well as the changing
pattern of bank lending make it desirable now to prescribe higher standards
in regard to paid-up capital and reserves. This statement shows the great
expansion of banking industry during recent years with only a small increase
in the paid-up capital and reserves to the extent known. The total deposits of
scheduled banks in the last 5 years excluding the P.L. 480 figures are as
follows :
Rs.
Rs.
Rs.
Rs.
Rs.
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In the course of the last decade, the Indian banking system has
passed through a phase of vigorous business expansion following
the increasing economic activity under the stimulus of the First
and the Second Five Year Plans. Reflecting the substantial rise in
the developmental expenditure and the level of economic activity,
particularly since 1955, deposits of Indian commercial banks
(excluding P. L. 480 deposits) have nearly doubled while, during
the same period, bank credit has risen by two and a half times and
the ratio of credit to deposits has risen from 49 per cent as at the
end of December, 1950 to 69 per cent at the end of December,
1960. There has also been a change in the distribution of bank
credits; credit to industry, which in December, 1950 constituted 32
per cent of the total credit, accounted for 51 per cent of the total as
on October 30, 1960. Further, a few of the commercial banks have
been venturing into new lines of activity such as term lending to
industry, underwriting of new issues with the concomitant risk of
having to hold unsold shares, guaranteeing of deferred credit
payments, etc. The profits of the Indian scheduled banks have
doubled between 1950 and 1960. In contrast, the growth in capital
and reserves has been very slow, particularly in relation to the growth
of deposits. The total paid-up capital and reserves of Indian
scheduled banks increased between 1950 and 1960 by only Rs. 9
crores to Rs. 68 crores. The increase in paid-up capital component
during the period was only Rs. 2.3 crores. The ratio of paid-up
capital and reserves to deposits has, therefore, been steadily
declining from 13 per cent in 1939 to 9 per cent in 1950 and further
to 5 per cent in 1960 excluding P.L. 480 deposits). As at the end of
January, 1961, the ratio of paid-up capital and reserves to deposits
was below 5 per cent in the case of 23 banks of which 9 were large
banks (having deposits above Rs. 25 crores). The ratio of only paidup capital to deposits was below 3 per cent in the case of 23 banks
of which 10 were big banks.
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
In connection with the scheduled bank credit, it has been observed that
the scheduled bank credit, which had expanded by Rs. 139 crores in 195960, rose further by Rs. 163 crores (to Rs. 1288 crores) during the said year
under review. It is further observed as follows :
The expansion in 1960-61 occurred together with a decline in deposit
resources (inclusive of P.L. 480 funds) of Rs. 35 crores; in contrast,
the expansion in 1959-60 took place alongside a rise of Rs. 228
crores in deposit resources (inclusive of P.L. 480 funds). Exclusive
of P.L. 480 funds, as explained earlier, deposit liabilities showed a
167
The achievements of the Second Five Year Plan have been summed up in
the report in the following words :
AI
The achievement of the Second Five Year Plan which has just
ended remains impressive, despite the foreign exchange crisis early
in its course, the vicissitudes of natures bounty and a steady rise
in prices throughout the period. It is true that not all targets have
been fulfilled, but commandable advance on a wide front has been
attained in production and standards of living and welfare services
and in preparing the groundwork for further advance in the Third
Plan. In spite of the vagaries of the monsoon and the inadequacies
of organisation, agricultural production went up by 16 per cent over
the Plan period and the output of foodgrains by 20 per cent, though
the output of 1960-61 is expected to fall short of the target of 80
million tons by 2 million tons. Industrial production made an
impressive advance of 40 per cent. National income at constant
prices is estimated to have risen by 19.6 per cent, as against a
rise of 18.4 per cent over the First Plan period. Plan outlay at Rs
4,600 crores was Rs. 100 crores higher than the revised target,
though Rs. 200 crores below the original target; allowing for the
rise in prices, investment in real terms shows a greater shortfall in
relation to the target. On the other side of the medal, exports were
168
The Third Plan envisages over the five years an aggregate investment
of Rs.10,400 crores, an increase in the ratio of investment to national
income from 11 per cent in the Second Plan to 14.15 per cent in
the Third Plan, an increase in the ratio of savings to national income
from about 8.5 per cent to nearly 11.5 percent, a substantial rise in
agricultural and industrial production and and increase in national
income of about 30 per cent. With additional taxation of Rs. 1,710
crores and the combined total of market borrowings an small savings
at Rs. 1,400 crores, the deficit financing required has been reduced
to the level of Rs. 550 crores, which is expected to be noninflationary, if the output targets are realised.
BE
In the Trend and Progress of Banking in India during the year 1960 published
by the Reserve Bank of India it is stated in paragraph 80 and 81 as under:
Indian banking achieved significant progress in all aspects of its
business during the years 1956-60, and thus responded satisfactorily
the requirements of the Second Plan. The growth of deposits was
substantial; it was of the order of 85 per cent for the scheduled
banks. The number of bank accounts, which is an important
indicator of the spread of banking habit, also rose markedly by
about 55 per cent as compared to only 13 per cent in the First Plan
period. The bulk of the increase was in the savings and fixed deposit
accounts of small men, though this meant a rise in the cost of
service of banks. The loan accounts increased by 83 per cent,
almost by the same rate as in the First Plan period. Equally
impressive was the rise in the volume of other services of banks
such as issue of drafts and telegraphic transfers and collection
and negotiation of bills, both inland and foreign.
169
which the banks would otherwise have to pay under the Income Tax Act.
Under the Scheme of the Indian Income Tax Act prevailing for some time the
taxes payable by a company in respect of the taxable income of the company
amount to 45 per cent thereof. A further 5 per cent increase is envisaged in
the new budget as presented to Parliament. In the result, any increase in the
establishment charges will be offset by reduction of taxes to the extent of
about 50 per cent of such increase.
5.166. I have before me material from which to judge the paying capacity
is considered having regard to the paying capacity of a fair cross section
considered classwise and if the industry is considered unitwise. As regard
the banks falling in Class A, the Exchange Banks do not plead incapacity to
pay reasonable wages. Whether one looks at a fair cross section of the
banks falling in Class A or considers the individual units in the Class, these
banks without any difficulty, would be in a position to bear the burden of the
increase in remuneration and of the increase in the other benefits and amenities
provided under this award.
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for them full or adequate neutralisation in respect of the rise in the cost of
living and that consequently erosion has taken place in their total emoluments
in terms of purchasing power. It is the contention of the workmen that money
has its value in terms of its purchasing power, that when prices of goods
consumed by the workmen increase, the workmen with the same amount of
money can buy less quantity of those goods and that consequently there
results a reduction in their real wages. They plead that if there had been a
direct and visible cut in their wages they would have resisted the same but in
the case of such indirect cuts they suffer the same in misery. The Sastry
Tribunal by linking the dearness allowance with the consumer price index
numbers has provided relief to a certain extent but it is claimed that the relief
is not full.
5.171. Another factor to be taken into consideration is the national income and its distribution. The net national output at factor cost i.e. the national
income at current prices and at 1948-49 prices and the per capita net output
at current prices and at 1948-49 prices for the years 1951-52 to 1959-60 were
as follows :National income
At current prices in
Rs 100 crores
99.7
98.2 104.8
At 1048-49 prices in
Rs. 100 crores
91.0
96.1
At current prices in
Rupees
At 1948-49 prices in
Rupees
250.1 256.6 268.7 271.9 273.6 283.5 277.1 292.6 291.6
BE
AI
5.172. One of the factors to be taken into account in fixing wage Scales is
the productivity of labour. As observed by the Sastry Tribunal, the awards of
industrial tribunals and courts make no more than a passing reference to the
productivity of labour. In banking industry, it is very difficult to fix standards of
work by means of time and motion studies, by piece rate method or by
incentive method of wage payment. The industry of banking is not concerned
with the production of goods. The Bank Award Commission has observed
that banking is not a productive business from the ordinary common sense
point of view so that the first out of the four principles laid down by the Committee
on Fair Wages, viz., the productivity of labour, cannot so much apply to the
industry of banking. The efficiency of workmen in the banking industry does
play a part in inspiring and establishing confidence of the public in banks, but
there are hardly any standards by which to measure the productivity of labour
in banks in terms of the services rendered by the banks or the profits made
by the banks.
(xv) Erosion.
5.173. The workmen have strongly urged that their present wages are
inadequate, that the present formula of dearness allowance does not provide
172
5.174. The following table indicates what has been termed the arithmetical
erosion in the emoluments (excluding house rent allowance) of the bank
employees in the various classes of banks in Area I at the all-India Working
class consumer price index number 169, base 1944=100, equivalent to 123
base 1949 = 100, on the hypothetical basis that the emoluments prescribed
by the Sastry Award as modified were prescribed at the all-India working
class consumer price index number 144 (base 1944=100).
Year of
Service
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
B Class
C Class
3.69
4.04
4.39
4.73
5.08
5.43
5.77
6.12
6.30
6.47
6.64
6.82
6.99
7.17
7.34
7.51
7.69
7.86
8.03
8.21
4.19
4.89
5.58
6.45
7.32
8.19
8.80
9.40
10.11
10.81
11.51
12.21
13.00
13.80
14.59
15.48
16.42
17.30
18.19
19.20
173
3.19
3.54
3.89
4.24
4.58
4.93
5.28
5.62
5.97
6.32
6.49
6.67
6.84
7.01
7.19
7.36
7.53
7.70
7.88
8.06
Clerks Subordinate
2.81
3.50
4.19
4.89
5.58
6.45
7.32
8.19
8.80
9.40
10.22
10.81
11.51
12.21
13.01
13.80
14.59
15.48
16.42
17.30
3.04
3.39
3.74
4.08
4.43
4.78
5.13
5.47
5.82
6.17
6.51
6.69
6.86
7.03
7.21
7.38
7.56
7.73
7.90
8.08
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
22.13
23.14
24.23
25.33
26.94
8.38
8.55
8.73
8.90
8.07
20.16
21.17
22.13
23.14
24.23
8.23
8.40
8.58
8.75
8.92
18.19
19.21
20.16
21.17
22.13
8.25
8.43
8.60
8.77
8.94
5.175. The Workmens claim for revision on the basis of erosion has
been opposed by the banks. Apart from the question whether full neutralisation
should be allowed or not, that the demands as made by the workmen are not
warranted by the limited extent of the erosion.
AI
BE
Or again we may take a cross section of the wage map of India for
clerical staff and compare the prevailing rates in a mixed bag
consisting of industrial concerns, municipalities, insurance
companies, government departments, Port Trust and Reserve Bank
of India.
The Sastry Tribunal has then set out the emoluments received at the
initial start by members of the clerical staff of various concerns in this mixed
bag. It has also given a summary of the emoluments given to clerks under
the more important award relating to various concerns.
5.178. The Labour Appellate Tribunal after referring to the fact that the
Sastry Tribunal had set out in its award the total emoluments of a mixed
batch of industries and Government and quasi-Government institutions stated
that it had collected other material also. The Labour Appellate Tribunal has
thereafter set out the total emoluments payable to a clerk at the initial start in
28 different concerns. After considering the emoluments payable in these
174
Since the date of the decision of the Labour Apellate Tribunal the Second
Pay Commission has made its report and there has been an upward revision
of the total emoluments payable to employees in the Central Government.
The total emoluments payable to a lower division clerk at Bombay at the
initial start have gone up from Rs. 130 inclusive of compensatory allowance
and house rent to Rs. 156 inclusive of compensatory allowance and house
rent. As regards the concerns referred to by the Labour Appellate Tribunal
there has been a considerable upward revision in the total remuneration of
employees. The following is a comparative statement showing the changes
that have taken place since the date of the Labour Appellate Tribunal decision
in the total emoluments payable to a clerk at the initial start by a large
number of concerns referred to by the Labour Appellate Tribunal :
Concerns mentioned in
Total minimum
emoluments as
shown in the
Labour
Appellate
Tribunal
decision
at page 66
emoluments
when the allIndia index
number was
123 (Base
1949=100)
Bombay
175
195.00
190.00
170.00
154.56
161.69
195.00
224.65
224.65
192.32
225.00
174.87
220.00
154.56
135.00
154.56
178.65
183.60
193.50
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
149.56
161.12
154.56
139.00
120.00
138.00
124.50
179.75
190.86
168.54
176.00
169.00
154.39
142.50
138.00
178.00
125.00
151.00
161.25
Closed down
Closed down
(Under appeal in
Supreme Court)
Not available
Now part of Life
Insurance Corporation
Under adjudication
Not available
AI
If the method adopted by the Labour Appellate Tribunal for the purpose
of fixing the total emoluments of a clerk in an A Class bank in Area I is
adopted, there is a good case made out for revision of the emoluments of
workmen in the banking industry.
(xvii) New Scales of Pay
5 179. There is considerable material placed before me to show that as
a result of the awards of adjudicators and wage boards and agreements
arrived at between employers and employees, there has been a considerable
increase in the level of total emoluments paid by various concerns. Some of
these are comparable and some are not. By and large, they show that there
is an upward trend in wages payable both to the members of the clerical staff
and members of the subordinate staff.
5.180. It has been strongly urged on behalf of the banks that the Sastry
176
Award as modified having linked the dearness allowance with the consumer
price index number has provided for an increase in the amount of wages
having regard to the increase in the cost of living and that no case exists for
any further increase in the remuneration payable to workmen. There is no
doubt that workmen are being paid more today than what they were receiving
at the time when the Labour Appellate Tribunals decision was implemented.
The workmen, however, contend that there is no increase in their real wages
and that, on the contrary, there is considerable erosion in their real wages
having regard to the increase in the cost of living and the reduction in the
purchasing power of money. The arithmetical erosion that has taken place
has already been set out earlier in this chapter. A member of the clerical staff
employed by an A Class Bank in Area I in the first year of his service receives
at the Index No. 123 (1949=100) by way of basic pay and dearness allowance
Rs. 152.85 and Rs. 8 as house rent allowance if he is employed at Bombay
and Calcutta and Rs. 6 as house rent allowance if he is employed at other
places with population over 7 lakhs. The question that arises for consideration
is whether what is being given under the Sastry Award as modified is sufficient
having regard to the changes in the circumstances that have taken place.
Burmah Shell
---- ---Standard - Vacuum ---General Motors ---- ---Ford Motors
---- ---Glaxo Laboratories ---Imperial Tobacco ---- ---Hindustan Vanaspati Hindustan
Lever Brothers -- LIvers
United Traders
Tata Oil Mills
---- ---Volkart Brothers (Voltas)
Greaves Cotton ---- ----
5.181. Having considered all aspects of the matter, I am of the view that
to the extent that prevailing rates of wages in similar occupations in the
same localities play a part in the fixation of wages, the workmen have made
out a case for an upward revision of their emoluments.
BE
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
5.182. For the purpose of constructing the pay scales one of the important
factors to be considered is the need of the workmen at various stages of their
lives whilst they are in service. For this purpose workmen may be divided
broadly in two categories, namely, those who are members of the clerical
staff and those who are members of the subordinate staff. The case of the
members of the supervisory staff is being separately considered by me. It
would be necessary to consider what would be the minimum wage and what
would be a fair wage. In order that a proper wage structure may be constructed
in an all-India industry like banking with banks having branches spread all
over the country, widely differing in size and earning capacity and situated in
places which are not similar to one another, it would be necessary to have an
enquiry made as regards the needs of the workmen in various areas, having
regard to the class of society from which they generally hail, having regard to
the conditions prevailing at the places where they are working and having
regard to the social and economic conditions prevailing in the country. The
pattern of consumption, the prices of essential commodities and the needs
of the workmen vary in different parts of the country. Even at the same place
the needs of the workmen differ having regard to the strata or class of society
from which they are drawn and having regard to the various stages in their
lives.
5.183. Decisions of Tribunals given in the past have been very strongly
criticised before me as having been given without adequate data. Even the
177
norms adopted have been questioned. The data before me which may be
considered reliable and on which a decision could be based in connection
with the needs of the members of the clerical staff and the members of the
subordinate staff in various areas in the country in which the offices of banks
are situated, at various stages of their lives is meagre. Even as regards the
prices of necessities like food, clothing and housing in various parts ofthe
country, there is hardly any reliable evidence. When wage scales have to be
constructed with reference to a base year it would be proper to consider the
needs of the workmen having regard to that base year and having regard to
the type of wage intended to be provided. After fixing such pay scales a
formula for payment of the dearness allowance would have to be evolved to
provide against the changes in the cost of living above the level prevailing in
the base year. Unfortunately, there is no material before me from which I
could build up wage scales with reference to the needs of workmen in terms
of money for the base year referred to by me.
SCALES OF PAY
A Class Banks
In Rupees
Area
140-6-182-11-281-13-307-15-322-E.B.-15-337-16-369-18-405
I:
(1-7
9
2
1
1
2
2) year
II :
130-5-140-6-182-11-281-13-294-E.B.-13-307-15-337-16-369
(1-2
7
9
1
1
2
2) years
III :
120-5-140-6-182-11-270-E.B.-11-281-13-307-15-337
(1-4
7
8
1
2
2) years
AI
BE
5.185. In the absence of such material, the best thing that I can do
under the circumstances is to consider what generally should be given by
way of total emoluments consisting of basic pay and dearness allowance to
workmen in different classes of banks in different areas having regard to all
the available material before me and having regard to the various factors
which play a part in the fixation thereof. In order to construct pay scale with
reference to the base year 1949, it would be necessary to consider what
should be provided with reference to that base year having regard to the
scheme of dearness allowance which would yield what is generally intended
to be given at the index level at which it is intended to be given. For the
purpose of constructing such pay scales, I have adopted the following
conversion formula : For every decrease of one point in the all India working
class consumer price index number base 1949=100 below the aforesaid
level there should be, in the case of the members of the clerical staff a three
fourth per cent decrease in such total emoluments, i.e. the rate of the notional
neutralisation to be taken into account should be 75 per cent. As regards the
members of the subordinate staff, I have considered that for every decrease
of one point from such level there should be one per cent decrease in such
total emoluments, the rate of neutralisation in their case being 100 per cent.
The question of neutralisation has been dealt with in detail in the chapter
relating to dearness allowance.
5.187. Having very carefully considered every aspect of the matter, I fix
the following pay scales for workmen other than those belonging to the
subordinate staff with reference to the base year 1949.
5.184. From the very nature of the proceedings before me it is not open
to me to carry on any independent inquiry or investigation of my own for the
purpose of gathering material from which such scales could be built up.
pay scales for workmen employed in banks in the Excepted List keeping in
view the limited paying capacity of those banks. I have provided for them total
emoluments consisting of basic pay and dearness allowance which I consider
to be the minimum.
178
B Class Banks
Area
I:
130-5-140-6-182-11-281-13-294- E.B.-13-307-15-337-16-369
(1-2
7
9
1
1
2
2) years
II :
120-5-140-6-182-11-270-E.B.-11-281-13-307-15.337
(1-4
7
8
1
2
2) years
III :
112-4-120-5-140-6-182-11-248-E.B.-11-281-13-307
(1-2
4
7
6
3
2) years
C Class Banks except Banks in the Excepted List
Area
I:
120-5-140-6-182-11-270-E.B.-11-281-13-307- 15-337
(1-4
7
8
1
2
2) years
II:
112-4-120-5-140-6-182-11-248-E.B.-11-281- 13-307
(1-2
4 7
6
3
2) years
III :
104-4-120-5-140-6-182-11-226-E.B.-11-281.
(1-4
4
7
4
5) years
(The combined running scale will therefore be as follows:
104-108-112-116-120-125-130-135-140-146-152-158-164-170-176-182-
193-204-215-226-237-248-259-270-281-294-307-322-337-353-369-387-405).
Banks in the Excepted List
Area
179
I:
96-4-120-5-140-6-182-11-204-E.B.-11-259
(1-6
4 7 2
5) years
I:
50-1-69-E.B.-1-74
(1-19
5) years.
II:
88-4-120-5-140-6-182-E.B.-11-237
(1-8
4
7
5) years
II :
46-2-50-1-67-E.B.-1-72
(1-2
17
5) years.
III :
80-4-120-5-140-6-170-E.B.-6-182-11-215
(1-10
4
5
2
3) years.
III :
42-2-50-1-65-E.B.-1-70
(1-4
15
5) years.
A Class Banks
86-1-105-E.B.-1-108-2-112
(1-19
3
2) years.
II :
80-2-86-1-102-E.B.-1-107
(1-3 16
5) years.
Ill:
74-2-86-1-99-E.B.-1-104
(1-6 13
5) years.
B Class Banks
Area
80-2-86-1-102-E.B.-1-107
(1-3
16
5) years.
II:
74-2-86-1-99-E.B.-1-104
(1-6
13
5) years.
III:
68-2-86-1-96-E.B.-1-101
(1-9
10
5) years.
AI
I:
74-2-86-1-99-E.B.-1-104
(1-6
13
5) years.
II :
68-2-86-1-96-E.B.-1-101
(1-9
10
5) years.
IIl:
62-2-86-1-93-E.B.-1-98
(1-12 7
5) years.
Once these persons have been employed in the clerical grade, there is
no particular reason pointed out to me why they should have a lower maxima
provided for them. Taking everything into consideration I think it is desirable
that this limit upon the maxima should be removed and that these employees
should be treated like other employees in the same grade and I direct
accordingly.
BE
I:
Area
180
5.191. The Sastry Tribunal in paragraph 123 of its award has observed
that part-time employees cannot expect payment at the full rates provided by
it. It fixed for them a minimum of one-third of the appropriate rate of pay and
181
(xx) Apprentices
AI
5.193. The All India Bank Employees Association, the All India Bank
Employees Federation, the All India State Bank of India Staff Federation and
other workmens organisations have demanded that the service conditions
pay and allowances applicable to permanent workmen should also be
applicable to probationers. This demand has been opposed by some of the
banks. No case has been made out for modifying the provisions of the Sastry
Award in this connection, and I give a direction similar to the one in the
Sastry Award that the probationers should be paid the same emoluments as
have been fixed for confirmed workmen and that the above pay scales laid
182
BE
Supervisory Grade II
: Rs. 4002552530645.
: Rs. 340204002552530555.
: Rs. 3002040025500.
A Class Banks
B Class Banks
C Class Banks
Supervisory Grade I
: Rs. 500255253067535780.
: Rs. 450255253067535710.
: Rs. 4002552530645.
183
is as under :
C : Rs. 3502545030600
Supervisory Grade II :
A : Rs.3502545030600
B : Rs. 300203802545530515
C : Rs. 2602035025475
4. South Gujarat Bank of
Baroda, Employees
Union, Surat.
Rs. 500255253067535780
A : Rs. 450255253067535780
B : Rs. 400255253067535710
C : Rs. 3502547530655
6. Central Bank of
India Employees
Association, Amritsar.
Rs. 2501540025650
5.201. The All India Bank of Baroda Employees Federation has made
the same demand as the All India Bank Employees Association. The Central
Bank of India Employees Associations at Patna and Muzaffarpur and the
Behar Provincial Central Bank of India Employees Association, Muzaffarpur
have followed the All India Bank Employees Federation in making their
demands. The Vadodra Rajya Bank Nokar Sangh has included Assistant
Managers, Sub-Managers, Sub-Agents, Superintendents, Accountants and/
or Officer Grade I in Supervisory Grade I, and in Supervisory Grade II, It has
included Assistant Accountants, Supervisors, and/or Officers Grade II,
Departmental in charge, Sub-Accountants, Junior Officers, Probationary
Assistants, Clerks in charge, Cashiers in charge, Officers in charge, Head
Cashiers. Senior Assistants, Junior Assistants, Tellers, Godown Inspectors,
Inspectors, Auditors, Treasurers, Representatives, Head Clerks, Chief Clerks,
Assistants, Caretakers and Caterers etc. The State Bank of Patiala (All
cadres) Employees Association has pointed out that the following grades
were introduced by the bank for the supervisory staff from 1st October
1958 :
AI
BE
5.198. The All India Bank Employees Federation has asked for a grade
of Rs. 250-15-400-25-650 for banks in group A which according to its charter
of demands is to consist of banks with working funds of Rs. 15 crores and
more and a grade of Rs. 200-15-350-20-550 for banks in group B which is to
consist of banks with working funds of less than Rs. 15 crores for the
supervisory staff viz., Assistant Managers, Sub-Managers, Sub-Agents,
Superintendents, Accountants and/or Officer Grade I, Additional or Assistant
Accountants, Supervisors and/or Officers Grade II, Departmental Incharges,
Sub-Accountants, Junior Officers, Probationer Assistants, Clerks Incharges,
Cashier Incharges, Officer Incharges, Head Cashiers, Senior Assistants,
Junior Assistants, Tellers, Godown Inspectors, Inspectors Auditors,
Treasurers Representatives, Head Clerks, Chief Clerks, Assistants,
Caretakers and Caterers etc.
Supervisory Grade I :
5.199. The All India State Bank of India Staff Federation has claimed a
special grade of Rs. 50020700 for Sub-Accountants and Head Cashiers.
5.200. Some more unions have made claims in respect of the Supervisory
Staff and the grades as claimed by them are given below :
1. State Bank of Patiala
Supervisory Grade I : Rs. 3752552530675 35815
(ALL Cadres)
Employees Association. Supervisory Grade II : Rs. 280204002552530645
2. Indian Overseas Bank Supervisory Staff
Employees Union,
Madras.
3. Vadodra Rajya Bank
Nokar Sangh.
: Rs. 4002552530675
Supervisory Grade I :
A : Rs. 4503057035745
B : Rs. 400255003059035650
184
185
AI
BE
not attempt to fix a wage scale as it could not be postulated, at what stage in
the scale such an employee would be drawing by way of wages as defined in
the Act an amount over Rs. 500. It is also submitted that this Tribunal has no
jurisdiction to deal with employees exercising managerial functions or with
supervisory staff carrying out administrative functions and duties. The Kerala
Bankers Association objects to any claim as regards a scale of pay for the
supervisory staff. The Northern India Banks Association has submitted that
considering the nature of work performed by employees in the supervisory
grades, the existing allowances payable to them are adequate, that in view of
the peculiar nature of banking business and the need for entrusting to officers,
at each branch office, responsible jobs, involving the grant of powers of attorney,
all members of the supervisory staff holding a power of attorney should be
classed with the managers and officers entrusted with administrative duties
and should be taken out of the category of workmen. The National Bank of
Lahore has contested the demands of the employees about pay scales to
the supervisory staff and has submitted that there is no justification for
introducing separate scales of pay for workmen discharging duties alloted to
them and that mere designation associated to the duties performed by a
workman cannot entitle him to any higher wage. The Bharatha Lakshmi Bank
has submitted that there should be no supervisory Grades I and II for D Class
banks. It has pointed out that the supervisory Grade II suggested, by the
employees for C Class banks is even costlier than the grade of Agents of
this bank which is Rs. 14010240 besides dearness allowance and rent
free quarters or rent in lieu thereof and that the highest point in this grade is
less than the starting point in the grade suggested by the employees. The
Jaya Laxmi Bank considers the grades demanded for Supervisory Grade II
and Supervisory Grade I as beyond the capacity of small banks and suggests
that there should be no supervisory grades. The Miraj State Bank has submitted
that on any showing the bank is bound to be classified in D Class, that the
demand made by the All India Bank Employees Association so far as the
grade of the supervisory staff is concerned, is not applicable to the Miraj
State Bank as there was no demand in respect of Supervisory staff of D
Class banks and that if any such demand was made the bank should be
permitted to file its written statement. It has, however, submitted that the
demand made against the C Class banks in respect of the supervisory staff
is high and that the same should be rejected.
supplementary statement, pointed out that all employees who are promoted
by the Bank of Baroda to the Assistants Grade have to sign an agreement
which, it is alleged, is completely one-sided and did not give adequate
protection to employees who signed it. The Federation has therefore demanded
that in connection with the emoluments payable to the employees working in
the supervisory cadre, the Bank of Baroda should be specifically directed to
discontinue the practice of requiring the Assistant to sign the agreement
referred to above.
186
187
BE
workmen and that the wage structure as a whole would be rendered bad in
law even if a part of it was bad in law as the Supreme Court had clearly
indicated in the Express Newspapers case that the wage structure was an
integrated whole. It was submitted that in so far as the supervisory staff could
be dealt with under an award there should be an overriding clause to the
effect that at no stage and in no case the monthly wages should exceed the
upper limit of Rs. 500. It was submitted that in respect of those workmen who
were doing supervisory work only as a part of their duties (sometimes called
Sastry supervisors) the directions given by the Sastry Tribunal about special
allowance in paragraph 164(b) of its Award should be retained, that some
such provision should be made for those supervisors who came within the
ambit of the extended definition of workman under the Industrial Disputes
(Amendment) Act, 1956 and that option should be given to them for choosing
between the special allowance awarded by the Tribunal and the pay scales
which may be in force in banks,.
not be high but they form the junior executive cadre and are the potential
senior executives. It has, therefore, submitted that these persons form a
separate class whose terms and conditions of service must by the nature of
things be left to the bank and that the Tribunal should refuse to lay down any
service conditions for them. It further states that it has taken good care of
these officers and that they could not be benefited by the Tribunal laying
down any hard and fast rules about their terms and conditions of service, and
that the bank is the best judge of the merits of these officers and therefore a
request is made that no directions be given on this issue. The Bank further
submits that if the Tribunal lays down terms and conditions of service of the
supervisory staff and holds that the assistants in the bank drawing a total
emolument of less than Rs. 500 are covered by this reference, then an option
be given to such assistants to choose between the totality of the terms and
conditions of service as prescribed by this Tribunal and the conditions of
service that might be in force from time to time in the bank, and that the
assistants who opt for the conditions under the award would not have to sign
the agreement and therefore a direction on the point of agreement to be
signed by the assistants will not be necessary.
AI
5.206. At the hearing Shri Sule submitted (1) that workmen under the
Industrial Disputes Act can raise an industrial dispute for themselves and for
a section of them at any level; (2) that persons who are at present workmen
can raise an industrial dispute as regards their service conditions, not only at
all stages when they continue to be workmen but also when having regard to
a future possibility they cease to be workmen and continue in service of the
same employer; (3) that workmen can raise an industial dispute for employees
in the same establishment who are non-workmen right from the start, provided
they have a direct or substantial interest in the dispute of those non-workmen
and have a community of interest with them. It was urged that workmen were
entitled to raise a dispute about the scales of pay and other service conditions
of the members of the supervisory staff irrespective of the amount of wages
payable to them.
5.207. Oh behalf of a number of banks it was denied that there was any
community of interest between the supervisory staff and the clerical and
subordinate staff or that the clerical and subordinate staff were directly or
substantially interested in the terms of employment of the members of the
supervisory staff. It was stated that no demand relating to the supervisory
staff had been made and presented to the banks. It was submitted that the
Tribunal had no jurisdiction to provide wage scales for persons who were not
188
This definition shows that except for the persons specified in clauses (i),
(ii), (iii) and (iv) the expression workman, inter alia, means any person
employed in any industry to do any supervisory work for hire or reward, whether
the terms of employment be expressed or implied. Even if a person has been
employed in any industry to do any supervisory work for hire or reward, he is
not liable to be considered to be a workman if he is employed mainly in a
189
(i)
The Supreme Court has further stated that it seemed fairly obvious that
if the expression any person was given, its ordinary meaning, then the
defition clause would be so wide as to become inconsistent not merely, with
the objects and other provisions of the Act, but also with the other parts of
that very clause. It is also stated that the dispute between the employers and
workmen must be a real dispute capable of settlement or adjudication by
directing one of the parties to the dispute to give the necessary relief to the
other and that it is also obvious that the parties to the dispute must be
directly or substantially interested therein, so that if workmen raise a dispute,
it must relate to the establishment or part of the establishment in which they
are employed. As observed by the Supreme Court; the expression any
person in the definition clause means a person in whose employment or non
employment or terms of employment, or conditions of labour, the workmen
as a class have a direct or substantial interest, with whom they have, under
the scheme of the Act, a community of interest.
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Labour Law Journal at page 500 (same as 1958 Supreme Court Reports,
Page 1156) had occasion to consider the meaning of the expression any
person. In dealing with the question whether a dispute in relation to a person
who is not a workman falls within the scope of the definition of industrial
dispute given in section 2(k), the Supreme Court has observed that the
expression any person cannot mean anybody and everybody in this wide
world, that a person in respect of whom the employer-employee relation
never existed or can never possibly exist cannot be the subject matter of a
dispute between employers and workmen and that the definition clause must
be read in the context of the subject-matter and scheme of the Act and
consistently with the objects and other provisions of the Act. In dealing with
the provisions as they stood prior to the enlargement of the definition of the
term workman by the Industrial Disputes (Amendment) Act, 1956, the
Supreme Court has observed as follows :
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5.209. The All India Bank Employees Association has claimed wages
which in numerous cases exceed Rs. 500 per mensem for persons employed
in the banking industry to do supervisory work for hire or reward. It seeks to
justify the claim on the ground that workmen having regard to the definition of
the expression industrial dispute, were entitled to raise a dispute in connection
with the terms of employment of any person. The expression industrial
dispute has been defined by section 2(k) of the Industrial Disputes Act as
under :
Industrial dispute means any dispute or difference between
employers and employers, or between employers and workmen,
or between workmen and workmen, which is connected, with the
employment or non-employment or the term of employment or with
the conditions of labour, of any person.
It was submitted on behalf of the employees that they had a right to raise a
dispute not merely in connection with the terms of employment of any
workman, but also in connection with the terms of employment of a person
who did not fall within the definition of the expression workman.
5.210. The definition of the expression industrial dispute has come up
for consideration on several occasions before Tribunals and Courts of Law.
The Supreme Court, in the case of Workmen of Dimakuchi Tea Estate (Assam
Chah Karmachari Sangh) and Dimakuchi Tea Estate, reported in 1958 (1)
190
191
Tribunal for adjudication. Before the Central Government can refer a matter, it
must relate to any matter specified in the Second or the Third Schedule. The
Second Schedule deals with matters which ordinarily fall within the jurisdiction
of Labour Courts. Item 6 in the Second Schedule refers to all matters other
than those specified in the Third Schedule. This item cannot cover a dispute
relating to the fixation of wages of any class of persons. Section 7 of the Act
says that the appropriate Government may, by notification in the Official
Gazette, constitute one or more Labour Courts for the adjudication of industrial
disputes relating to any matter specified in the second Schedule. From the
scheme of the Act, it is clear that the Labour Courts cannot deal with
questions relating to fixation of scales of pay or wages of any class of persons.
5.214. When we come to the Third Schedule the only item which may
have a bearing on the subject is item 1. Item 1 relates to wages, including
the period and mode of payment. Having regard to the definition of the
expression wages given in section 2(rr), this item can only refer to
remuneration payable to a workman. There is no other item under which
fixation of scales of pay is liable to fall, with the result that under the provisions
of section 10(1A) it is not open to the Central Government to make any
reference of an industrial dispute concerning scales of pay of or the
remuneration payable to a non-workman to a National Tribunal for adjudication.
In the order of reference, dated 21st March 1960, the Central Government
has referred the dispute between banking companies and corporations
specified therein on the one hand, and their workmen on the other, in respect
of matters specified in the Second Schedule to the order of reference. The
Second Schedule Inter alia refers to scales of pay; method of adjustment
in the scales of pay. This item in the light of the powers of the Central
Government to make a reference would not cover the fixation of scales of pay
for non-workmen or payment of remuneration to non-workmen.
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192
5.215. Apart from any other consideration, non-workmen are not before
me, and even if I had otherwise the jurisdiction to fix scales of pay for them,
I would not be justified in doing so in their absence and without hearing what
they may have to say in the matter.
5.216. The demand for different scales of pay for supervisory staff is
made on behalf of persons, some of whom are workmen and some of whom
are non-workmen. There is no standardised nomenclature adopted by banks
in connection with persons employed to do supervisory work. There is no
Standardisation of duties either. A person under the same designation may
in one bank be performing duties and discharging functions different from
those which a person bearing the same designation may be performing and
discharging in other banks. As regards the supervisory staff not covered by
the Sastry Award, the scales of pay are different in different banks. I have not
even been supplied with a list showing the designation of persons who are at
present drawing the supervisory allowance of Rs. 50 in all the banks which
are before me. It would be difficult to describe persons employed to do
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supervisory work by their designations and fit them into different scales of
pay.
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5.217. It was suggested that if two scales are fixed, one scale may be
applied to those who are drawing the supervisory allowance under the Sastry
Award and the other scale may be reserved for those who have been subsequently brought within the definition of workman who, before the amendment
of 1956, did not fall within the definition of workman. I asked the representatives
of workmen to describe to me, by reference to the designations of persons or
by reference to duties, the persons who have been included in the definition
of workman by virtue of the amendment who were not prior thereto so
included, but they were unable to do so. There is no evidence before me
about the extent of the duties of a supervisory nature discharged by various
persons in various banks. Some persons employed to supervisory work may
discharge supervisory functions only for a small period of the day. Various
types of functions are combined in a number of banks. I have made every
effort to impress upon the parties before me, especially the workmen, the
necessity of placing sufficient material before me which would enable me to
do justice to the case of the members of the supervisory staff and which
would enable me, to the extent that I have the jurisdiction to provide proper
scale or scales of wages for persons employed in a supervisory capacity. In
the present state of the record, it is impossible to fix any scale or scales of
pay in which persons who are employed to do supervisory work could be
fitted.
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5.218. Having carefully considered all aspects of the matter and having
considered all the evidence placed before me, I am left with no alternative
except only to fix special allowances for workmen employed in a supervisory
capacity, as was done by the Sastry Tribunal after applying to them the
scales of pay provided for the clerical staff. Having regard to the scheme
relating to the scales of pay adopted by me, I have fixed suitable special
allowances for supervisors in A Class banks, in B Class banks and in C
Class banks, including banks in the Excepted List. I am conscious of the
fact that It is not a very satisfactory way of dealing with the matter. The
nature of duties performed by persons who would draw the allowance, the
amount of responsibility involved in the performance of the task allotted to
such persons and the period of time during which such duties have to be
performed may vary from bank to bank and from area to area. In deciding
whether a workman is entitled to supervisory allowance, the designation of
the workman would not be decisive. In order to entitle a workman to such
allowances what would be determinative would be the nature of the duties
and functions, assigned to him, as has been laid down by the Supreme Court
in the case of Lloyds Bank Limited Vs. Pannalal Gupta and others reported
in 1961 (I) Labour Law Journal, page 18.
5.221. The Sastry Tribunal provided special allowances for the below
mentioned categories of workmen employed in various classes of banks as
under :
Categories of employee
Class of Banks
194
195
A.
B.
C.
D.
Rs.
Rs.
Rs.
Rs.
1.
Comptists
10
10
10
10
2.
20
20
15
10
3.
20
15
10
15
11
16
14
6.
7.
8.
9.
12
10
15
15
12
10
25
25
20
15
Supervisory, superintendents, sub-accountants, departmental in charges, employees in charge of treasury pay offices
50
C.
D.
Rs.
Rs.
3 280
3
3
8
7
8
7
45
30
12
25
10
20
8
18
The Sastry Tribunal has stated that the general observations made by it in
the case of staff would ordinarily apply to these persons also.
45
40
35
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The aforesaid provisions were not to govern head cashiers and sub accountants
in the Imperial Bank of India. The Sastry Tribunal has made it clear that the
aforesaid allowances were applicable to incumbents of such of these posts
who were workmen. It further provided that when an employee came within
more than one category, he would be entitled to the highest rate applicable
to him. For the purpose of these allowances the Sastry Tribunal made no
distinction as between one Area and another. As regards graduates and
holders of banking diplomas like C.A.I.I.B., and C.A.I. B., the Sastry Tribunal
provided for them additional increments in the basic scales of pay, two
increments provided for graduation and one increment for completing Part I of
the examination for the diploma, and another for completing Part II of the
examination for the diploma, a person having both the qualifications being
entitled to claim the benefit of both the sets of increments. The Sastry Tribunal
considered that it was better to provide for such increments rather than give
to the employees who had or acquired such qualifications a special allowance.
The Sastry Tribunal has observed that with regard to others, it did not think
that any compulsory directions need be given and that it would be for the
banks if they were so pleased to consider the matter.
5.222. As regards members of the subordinate staff the Sastry Tribunal
Provided for special allowances for the following categories of workmen
employed in various classes of banks :
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B.
Rs.
4
4
9
9
5.223. The Labour Appellate Tribunal did not disturb the scheme of the
Sastry Tribunal in connection with special allowances. In the course of its
decision it has observed that the circumstances determining the extent of
responsibility of a special post differ not merely from bank to bank and area
to area, but also from branch to branch of the same bank and that it was
convenient therefore to indicate a minimum and leave it to the bank to fix on
a consideration of circumstances of each case what the actual special
allowance should be. The Labour Appellate Tribunal directed that electricians
should receive a special allowance at the same rate as the one prescribed by
the Sastry Tribunal for drivers. The Labour Appllate Tribunal recorded an
agreement whereunder it was provided that At each local Head office of the
Imperial Bank of India (viz. at Calcutta, Bombay and Madras) there will be
one member of the subordinate staff (i.e. Jamadar, Naik, or Dafadar) who will
rank as Head Messenger and will be entitled to the allowance of Rs. 30.
***No post in any of the Branches or sub offices will qualify for this Head
Messengers allowance.
5.
Class of Banks
A.
Rs.
5
5
10
10
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4.
Categories of employees
5.224. On behalf of the workmen a claim has been made for a special
allowance for a very large number of categories of workmen. Between the All
India Bank Employees Association and the All India Bank Employees
Federation a demand has been made for special grades or special allowances
for no less than 58 different categories of workmen in the clerical and
supervisory grade and for special allowances for 25 different categories of
workmen in the subordinate grade. There are some other categories also for
whom demands have been made by other workmens organisations. The
demand is for the same amount of special allowance for the same category
of workmen irrespective of the class of bank in which they may be employed.
It is pleaded that the existing special allowances were not adequate.
5.225. The Indian Banks Association has pleaded for the continuation of
the present special allowances and for payment of a special allowance of Rs.
15 per month to the accounting machine operators. Save as aforesaid it has
opposed the demands made on behalf of workmen. It has claimed that
197
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Sastry Award has not specified the nature of work to be done and the duties
which are required to be performed by the various persons who are entitled to
receive special allowances. It is further contended that some banks adopt
different nomenclatures in order to avoid payment of these allowances. They
have claimed that the nature of work of each category should be taken into
account for the grant of special allowances, irrespective of the designation of
the employee concerned.
employees who are employed to do specified kinds of jobs for the whole
time only would be eligible to special allowances.
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5.227. The State Bank of India has denied that there is or can be any
category of workmen in the State Bank who could be classified either as
highly skilled or even skilled. It has submitted that designations were illusive
and deceptive and that Tribunals have always taken the view that only the
duties and work involved mattered. It has opposed the demands of the
workmen. Other banks have also opposed the demands of workmen.
5.228. It has been urged on behalf of the employees that the special
allowances granted by the Sastry Tribunal are not based on any rational and
scientific wage differentials looking to the nature of the work and responsibility
of the position occupied by the workman concerned and that the same have
been fixed on an ad hoc basis, without assigning any reason for such fixation.
If special allowances are given based on wage differentials properly calculated
after taking into account (1) the degree of skill, (2) the strain of work, (3) the
experience involved, (4) the training required, (5) the responsibility undertaken,
(6) the mental and physical requirements, (7) the disagreeableness of the
task, (8) the hazard attendant on the work and (9) the fatigue involved, they
would be more scientific and more satisfactory. The criticism levelled against
the Sastry scheme of allowances however is of a negative character. The
workmen themselves have not adduced any evidence which would enable
me to arrive at such wage differentials. The demands of the workmen for
special allowances are also made on an ad hoc basis.
5.229. A complaint has been made on behalf of the workmen that the
198
5.232. As held by the Supreme Court in Lloyds Bank Limited vs. Pannalal
Gupta reported in 1961 (1) LLJ. page 18 in deciding the status of an employee
the designation of the employee is not decisive; what determines the status
is a consideration of the nature and duties of the function assigned to the
employee concerned.
5.233. The special allowances payable at present workmen other than
those belonging to the subordinate staff need to be enhanced to a certain
extent in view of the changes made in the scheme of basic pay and dearness
allowance under this award.
Graduates and Holders of National Diploma in Commerce
5.234. The All India Bank Employees Association has demanded for
graduates and holders of National Diploma in Commerce a special allowance
of Rs. 25 per month, while the All India Bank Employees Federation has
demanded for graduates only two increments with a minimum of Rs. 35 per
month. Most of the unions have followed the All India Bank Employees
Association in making a demand in this respect. Some have followed the
Federation. A Union has demanded only two increments while another has
demanded a special allowance of Rs. 25 for graduates or equivalent diploma
holders'. The All India Bank of Baroda Employees Federation by its
supplementary statement has asked for a special allowance of Rs. 25 for
each graduation and for the holding of the diploma. The State Bank of Patiala
(All Cadres) Employees Association has pleaded for the grant of two
increments to graduates. This Association has also pleaded for grant of three
199
has demanded a special allowance of Rs. 10 on passing the first part of the
examination and a special allowance of Rs. 25 on passing both parts of the
examination. The All India Bank Employees Federation has demanded for
those who pass the first part of the aforesaid examinations one increment in
the scale with a minimum of Rs. 10 and on passing the second part of the
examination two increments in the scale with a minimum of Rs. 25 and also
Rs. 10 extra for employees having both the diplomas. Other unions have
made demands following the All India Bank Employees Association or the
All India Bank Employees Federation. The All India Bank of Baroda Employees
Federation has asked for cash awards of Rs. 150 and Rs. 250 to employees
who pass Part I and Part II, respectively of these examinations. The State
Bank of Patiala (All Cadres) Employees Association has asked for one
increment for Part I and two increments for Part I I in the scale. The All India
State Bank of India Staff Federation and the State Bank of India Employees
Association (Delhi Circle) have demanded one increment on completion of
the first part and one increment on completion of the second part of the
examinations.
5.238. The Banks in general are opposed to these demands. The Bombay
Exchange Banks Association considers the C.A.I.I.B. and C.A.I.B. diplomas
as valuless unless the employee can apply in practice the knowledge gained.
It has stated that all banks would wish to encourage the employees to pass
these banking examinations by making ex gratia payments not exceeding
Rs. 100 on passing Part I and not exceeding Rs. 200 on passing Part I I of
these examinations. The State Bank of India has suggested lump sum
payments for passing the examinations without specifying any amounts.
The Northern India Banks Association has expressed itself in favour of granting
two increments for passing Part I of the Banking diploma examination and
two increments for passing Part I I of this examination. The Jaya Laxmi Bank
is against providing additional increments to the banking diploma holders
and considers it desirable to award a cash prize in lump sum when the
employees complete Part I and Part I I of the banking diploma examination.
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5.235. The banks in general are opposed to the demands. The Bombay
Exchange Banks Association is against the grant of special increments to
graduates as it contends that in itself a University degree is of no value to the
bank and it does not mean that a graduate can successfully apply this
additional education for the benefit of the bank. The State Bank of India is
against the grant of any allowance and in case any revision is made it has
submitted that special increments should be discontinued and only a
reasonable lump-sum payment should be directed to be paid on the
acquisition of the qualifications and recognition thereof. The Bank of Baroda
opposes the demand of All India Bank of Baroda Employees Federation for
payment of a special allowance of Rs. 25 for each graduation and for holders
of a diploma. The Jaya Laxmi Bank has submitted that graduates should not
be provided with additional increments. The Indian Banks Association at the
time of the hearing has submitted that in case a special allowance was
awarded to graduates or holders of National Diplomas in Commerce, the
additional increments received by the employees under the provisions of the
Sastry Award should be deducted from the existing basic pay for purposes of
adjustment into the new scales of basic pay, if any, and the special allowances
prescribed by this Tribunal for such qualifications should then be paid in
addition to the basic pay or new basic pay arrived at as above.
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5.236. Under the Sastry Award, graduates are given two extra increments
in the grade. There is no provision made for holders of the National Diploma in
Commerce. The provision in the Sastry Award in terms of money operates
differently for different persons depending upon the class of bank in which
they are employed and depending upon the stage reached in the incremental
scale. It is desirable that there should be a uniform provision made for persons
who graduate or hold such diploma whether they have graduated or held
such diploma before they joined service or at any subsequent stage. This
uniformity can only be attained by providing a special allowance for them. I
accordingly direct that a special allowance of Rs. 10 per month be paid by all
classes of banks to graduates and to those who hold the National Diploma in
Commerce. This provision will apply only to those who join a bank or who
graduate or who obtain the National Diploma in Commerce on or after 1st
January 1962. No adjustment as desired by some of the banks will be
necessary in view of this direction. A person who is a graduate will not be
entitled to receive any additional increment if he graduates over again.
C.A.I.I.B and C.A.I.B. Diploma Examinations
5.237. As regards the Certified Associates of the Indian Institute of
Bankers, and Certified Associates of the Institute of Bankers, the Sastry
Tribunal has provided for one extra increment in the grade on passing Part I of
the aforesaid examinations and another extra increment in the grade on passing
Part II of the aforesaid examination. The All India Bank Employees Association
200
5.239. At the hearing the Indian Banks Association has submitted that
in case special allowances were awarded for passing Parts I and I I of the
Institute of Bankers Examination, the additional increments received by the
holders of these diplomas under the provisions of the Sastry Award should
be deducted from the existing basic pay for purposes of adjustment into the
new scales of basic pay, if any and the special allowances prescribed by this
Tribunal for such qualifications should then be paid in addition to the basic
pay or new basic pay arrived at as above.
5.240. The reasons given for granting a special allowance to graduates
also apply to those who have passed these examinations. I direct that a
special allowance of Rs. 5 per month be paid by all classes of banks to
persons who pass the first part of the aforesaid examinations and a special
allowance of Rs. 5 per month be paid by all classes of banks to persons who
201
Comptists
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5.242. The Sastry Tribunal has provided for comptists a uniform special
allowance of Rs. 10 per month in all classes of banks. A uniform special
allowance of Rs. 20 per month has been demanded by almost all workmens
organisations. Statements have been submitted before me showing difference
between the total salary of clerks and that of comptists in some commercial
concerns. In view of the pay scales being fixed with reference to the base
year 1949 a revision in special allowances is also necessary. Having taken
all circumstances into consideration, I provide a special allowance of Rs. 15
per month for comptists in all classes of banks.
Stenographers
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pass the second part of the aforesaid examinations. Those who have passed
both the parts will thus receive special allowance of Rs. 10 per month. A
person who has passed the first or the second part of the C.A.I.I.B. examination
will not be entitled to receive any extra special allowance for passing the first
or second part of the C.A.l.B. examination, and vice versa. These provisions
will apply only to those who join a bank or who pass the first part or the
second part of the aforesaid examinations on or after 1st of January 1962. In
view of this provision no direction for adjustment as suggested by some of
the banks will be necessary. A person who has already passed Part I of the
aforesaid examination and has become entitled to receive one increment
under the Sastry Award prior to 1st January 1962 will be fitted into the new
scales of pay on the basis of his being entitled to such increment. For passing
the second part of such examination after the 1st of January 1962 he will
receive the special allowance of Rs. 5 as herein provided.
202
203
cashiers : units of 4 clerks and below should get special allowances of Rs.
20, Rs. 15 and Rs. 11 per month in A Class banks, B Class banks and C
Class banks including banks in the Excepted List respectively. No case is
made out for a separate scale of pay for head cashiers and the demand in
connection with the same is rejected.
Assistant Cashiers
5.250 The All India Bank Employees Federation has demanded a special
allowance of Rs. 25 per month for assistant cashiers. The position at present
is that assistant cashiers (above the level of routine clerks); units of 5 clerks
and above , receive a special allowance of Rs. 16 per month in A Class
banks, Rs. 14 per month in B Class banks, Rs. 9 per month in C Class
banks and Rs. 7 per month in D Class bank and assistant cashiers (above
the level of routine clerks); units of 4 clerks and below, receive a special
allowance of Rs, 12 per month in A Class banks, Rs. 10 per month in B
Class banks, Rs. 7 per month in C Class banks and Rs. 5 per montn in D
Class banks. Special allowance at the uniform rate of Rs. 20 per month has
been demanded for assistant cashiers by the All India Bank Employees
Association.
5.251. Having regard to the changes in the scheme of basic pay and
dearness allowance I am providing special allowances for assistant cashiers
above the level of routine clerks); units of 5 clerks and above of Rs. 22, Rs.
19 and Rs. 12 per month in A Class banks, B Class banks and C Class
banks including banks in the Excepted List respectively, and for assistant
cashiers (above0 the level of routine clerks); units of 4 clerks and below of
Rs. 16, Rs. 14 and Rs. 10 per month in A Class banks, B Class banks and
C Class banks including banks in the Excepted List respectively. No case
has been made out for prescribing a uniform rate in all classes of banks in
the present circumstances or for higher rates.
Head Cashiers
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5.248. The All India Bank Employees Association had made a demand
for treating passing officers on equal footing with head clerks. The Indian
Banks Association while pointing out that passing officers do the work of
comparing and verifying signatures of customers on cheques with the specimen
signatures on the banks record has contended that no special skill or
responsibility is involved in this work. The Bombay Exchange Banks
Association has stated that passing officers who are employed in the National
and Grindlays Bank are paid head clerks special allowance of Rs. 20 per
month. Having considered all aspects of the matter, I am providing special
allowances for head clerks, chief clerks and passing officers of Rs. 27 per
month in A Class banks, Rs. 27 per month in B Class banks and Rs. 20 per
month in C Class banks including banks in the Excepted List. No case is
made out for a separate scale of pay and the demand in connection therewith
is rejected.
5.246. The special allowance at present for head clerks is Rs. 20 per
month in A and B Class banks and Rs. 15 per month in C Class banks and
Rs. 10 per month in D Class banks.
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205
5.255. The State Bank of India has submitted that the persent special
allowance is quite adequate. No case has been made out and there is no
necessity for enlarging the present category. In view of the change in the
scheme of basic pay and dearness allowance I am providing Rs. 20, Rs. 20
and Rs. 16 per month for cashiers-in-charge of cash in pay offices in A Class
banks, B class banks and C Class banks including banks in the Excepted
List respectively.
Cashiers-in-Charge of Cash in Treasury Pay Offices
AI
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5.259 The Sastry Tribunal has dealt separately with employees in charge
of pay offices or sub offices and employees in charge of treasury pay offices
and has fixed a special allowance of Rs. 25 per month for A Class banks, Rs.
25 per month for B Class banks, Rs. 20 per month for C Class banks and Rs.
15 per month for D Class banks for employees in charge of pay offices or sub
offices and the special allowance of Rs. 50 per month for A Class banks Rs.
45 per month for B Class banks, Rs. 40 per month for C Class banks and Rs.
35 per month for D Class banks for employees in charge of treasury pay
offices. The All India State Bank of India Staff Federation has demanded a
special allowance of Rs. 100 per month for employees in charge of pay
offices and sub pay offices. For employees in charge of treasury pay offices
a special allowance of Rs, 100 per month was demanded at the hearing.
According to the State Bank of India, the clerks in charge are not workmen
as they are employed in a managerial capacity. There is no legal evidence
before me on which I can adjudicate and determine whether they are workmen
or not Provision has been made for them by the Sastry Tribunal on the
footing that they are workmen. I am making a provision for them on a
similar hypothesis. If they or any of them are found not be workmen these
provisions will not apply to such of them as are not workmen.
5.257 The All India Bank Employees Association has made no demand
in respect of this category of employees. The State Bank of Patiala (All
Cadres) Employees Association has demanded a special allowance of Rs.
25 per month for cashiers-in-charge. The Bihar Provincial Central Bank of
India Employees Association and the Central Bank of India Employees
Association, Muzaffarpur, have demanded a special allowance of Rs. 25 for
receiving and paying cashiers. The South Gujarat Bank of Baroda Employees
Union has demanded a special allowance of Rs. 50 per month for receiving
and paying cashiers. The Cochin Commercial Bank Employees Union has
demanded a special allowance of Rs. 15 per month for paying cashiers and
Rs. 10 per month for receiving cashiers.
5.258. No case has been made out for any separate special provision for
these categories of workmen.
206
207
AI
BE
5.264. The State Bank of India has stated that Remington accounting
machines are used in its Central Accounts Office, Calcutta and in Central
Accounts Sections at Local Head Offices and that the employees who qualify
themselves as machine operators (which qualification is acquired by
undergoing a practical course of a few days) are granted one increment in
their grade pay. The State Bank of India has urged that double benefit of such
increment and of a special allowance should not be granted to them. I provide
that from and after the date when the special allowance hereby provided
becomes payable, the State Bank of India will be entitled to set off the amount
of such increment against the amount of the special allowance payable
hereunder to such operators in the State Bank of India.
date are not being paid any special allowance by the State Bank of India.
Under the Sastry Award as modified no special allowance is provided for
typists. The Sastry Tribunal has taken the view that typists form part of the
regular clerical grade. The question of granting special allowance to typists
was again considered by the Labour Appellate Tribunal on the representation
of the employees. The Labour Appellate Tribunal held that the case of clerks
who were typists did not call for special consideration. The work of the typists
was regarded by the Labour Appellate Tribunal as of a routine character and
the responsibility attaching to such work was not considered to be as great
as the responsibility attaching to the higher grades or work expected of a
routine clerk in the general scale. The scales of pay which I have fixed for the
clerical grade are adequate for typists. In A Class banks in Area I at the all
India index number of 123 (1949=100) a typist in the beginning of his service
will receive a sum of Rs. 164 and a typist who is in the 25th year of service
will receive about Rs. 473. There is no case made out for any special allowance
for typists.
5.263. Instances have been cited before me to show that the allowances
which are being paid at present to accounting machine operators in various
banks vary between Rs. 10 per month to Rs. 25 per month. It has also been
pointed out that the British Bank of Middle East pays a special allowance of
Rs. 50 per month to these operators. The allowance which is paid to the
punch operators in the Associated Cement Company is Rs. 30 per month.
Taking everything into consideration, I am providing that all classes of
banks should give a special allowance of Rs. 20 per month to the accounting
machine operators, I.B.M. Machine operators, Remington Rand accounting
machine operators, Hollerith Machine operators and punch operators. The
punch operators employed by the State Bank of India will, however, be
excluded from these directions in view of the special conditions under which
they are being employed at present.
208
209
borrowers godowns should be only slightly above the pay of the members of
the subordinate staff. No case has been made for the grant of a special
allowance to godown keepers and the claim is rejected.
Godown Inspectors
Audit clerks
BE
5.270. No case is made out for any special allowance for any of these
categories of workmen and the demand is rejected.
**** before a clerk can claim a special allowance his work must appear
to have some element of supervisory character. The work that is
done by the clerks in the audit department substantially consists
of checking up books of accounts and entries made in them. This
checking up is primarily a process of accounting, and the use of
the word checking cannot be permitted to introduce a consideration
of supervisory nature. The work of checking the authority of the
person passing the voucher or to enquire whether the limit of authority
has been exceeded is also no doubt work of a checking type but
the checking is purely mechanical, and it cannot be said to include
any supervisory function. If we take into account the six classes of
clerks specified in Clause 9, it would suggest that in respect of
each one of them there would normally be some persons working
under the persons falling in that clause; in other words, a person
claiming the status of a supervisor in Clause 9, should normally
have to supervise the work of some others who are in a sense
below him. On the argument urged by Mr. Ramamurthi every clerk
working in the audit department would be a supervisor and as such
would be entitled to draw a monthly special allowance of Rs. 50
though in the general hierarchy of the banks' employees he may
be much below the head clerks or head cashiers who draw Rs. 20
as monthly allowance. The tribunal has characterised the work of
these clerks as internal auditors but that obviously is an
overstatement. Audit in the sense in which the work internal audit
is understood is very different from the work of checking which is
entrusted to the clerks in the audit department. Similarly, when the
tribunal has observed that the clerks in the audit department
supervise the work of almost all the persons in that establishment
that again is obviously an overstatement. It would be ligitimate to
say that the work done in the audit department is important for the
proper and efficient functioning of the bank, but it would be idle to
elevate that work to the status of officers who supervise the work of
Tellers.
AI
210
211
directions to that effect should be given. The Bank of Baroda Ltd. denies that
these employees do any supervisory work as, according to the bank, the
work of signing demand drafts, telegraphic transfers, mail transfers, etc. as
second man given to some cashiers at small branches is not supervisory
work. It has relied upon the agreement reached with the Federation on 29th
October 1960 by which, according to the bank as a measure of interim
arrangement, pending the final decision of this Tribunal, the bank has allowed
the special allowance mentioned above to cashier-clerks under certain
conditions laid down in the agreement. The bank submits that this Tribunal
should hold that the contention of the bank that the work of these employees
is not of supervisory nature is correct and should dismiss the demand of the
Federation. At the hearing a uniform allowance of Rs. 50 was demanded for
this category of workmen.
Having regard to the nature of the duties of audit clerks, after considering
all aspects of the matter I am providing a special allowance of Rs. 10 per
month for audit clerks in all classes of banks. No case has been made out for
a separate scale of pay for them.
Cashier-Clerks
AI
BE
212
Group-In-Charge
5.276. There is a demand by the All India State Bank of India Staff
Federation that a group-in-charge should be paid a special allowance of Rs.
50 per month as against Rs. 20 per month which is being paid at present by
the State Bank of India. This category of employees are employed by the
State Bank of India in the Central Accounts Office, Calcutta, Government
Accounts Section, Nagpur, and the Central Accounts Sections at four Head
Offices. The State Bank of India has replied that the group-in-charge, have to
group the statements of entries posted for inter-branch transactions in packets
to facilitate balancing that these packets are distributed to clerks for balancing,
that over a group of about seven clerks a senior clerk is posted to perform
checking duties under the overall supervision of a sub-accountant and that
as the duties performed by the group-in-charge are more or less similar to
those of a head clerk, an allowance of Rs. 20 per month is being paid to the
group-in-charge. It appears that this category did not exist at the time of the
Sastry Award. Having regard to the duties performed by them and the scheme
of basic pay and dearness allowance I provide for a special allowance of Rs.
27 for this category of workmen.
Agency Clerks
5.277. By a supplementary statement, the Vadodra Rajya Bank Nokar
213
Sangh has demanded a special allowance of Rs. 20 per month for clerks
working in the Agency Department of the Bank of Baroda Ltd. on account of
the special nature of their work and the responsibilities undertaken by them.
It is alleged that amongst other duties performed by them, they check ledgers,
supervise the work of the branches, ask explanations from the branches in
case of mistake etc. It is alleged that this is a department of the bank
through which the working of the branches is controlled by the head office of
the bank. The Bank of Baroda, by a supplementary statement, has denied
that the work in this department is of any special nature and/or that it entails
any special responsibility on the staff working in that department, or that
there is supervision of any kind done by these clerks and that the claim is
untenable.
A
Rs.
C
Rs.
10
10
4.
Computists
15
15
15
5.
Stenographers
35
35
25
6.
27
27
20
7.
27
20
14
8.
20
15
11
9.
22
19
12
16
14
10
20
20
16
35
----
----
35
35
27
65
----
----
100
----
----
20
20
10
10
10
10
10
10
5.282. In view of the directions given the categories of workmen and the
amount of special allowances per month which such categories of workmen
will get in A, B and C Class banks, are given below :
65
60
55
40
----
----
Categories of workmen
27
----
----
3.
AI
BE
2.
1.
B
Rs.
Class of banks
214
215
AI
BE
5.288. It has been urged on behalf of the banks that these special
allowances should be paid to the employees only when they are required to
perform and when they in fact perform the special duties for the performance
whereof these allowances are prescribed and that the special allowances
should cease to be payable when the employees cease to perform the special
duties for any reason. It is further urged that special allowances are payable
when a person is employed whole-time to do specified jobs attracting such
allowances. It is also urged that such allowance should not become payable
when a person is casually or occasionally asked to do some duty of the type
attracting a special allowance. The special allowances which have been
awarded are monthly special allowances. They are intended to compensate
a workman for the performance of certain duties and the discharge of certain
functions which constitute the normal part of the duties performed and the
functions discharged by such person. They are not intended to be paid for
casual or occasional performance of such duties or the casual or occasional
discharge of such functions. It is however not necessary that the person
should continue to perform such duties or discharge such functions wholetime. For instance a person who is doing supervisory work need not do the
work of supervision all the time in order to be entitled to an allowance.
5.287. When an employee falls within more than one category, he would
be entitled to receive the special allowance at the highest rate applicable to
him.
216
217
The Sastry Award provides special allowance for head cash mazdoors
and also for cash durwans. In my view no case is made out for giving any
special allowance to any new category of workmen under the designation of
cash peons, cash coolies or cash mazdoors. Having considered all aspects
of the matter I direct that the head cash mazdoors will be entitled to receive
a special allowance of Rs. 5 per month in A Class banks, Rs. 4 per month in
B Class banks and Rs. 3 per month in C Class banks including banks in the
Excepted List. No case is made out for awarding any higher amounts.
Watchmen, Chowkidars and Cash Durwans
5.300. The Bank of Baroda in reply had alleged that the police Ramoshis
were not workmen of the bank and were not covered by the Sastry Award or
by this Reference. On 10th October 1961 the parties have come to a settlement
in connection with this demand and filed it before me with a request to give an
award in terms thereof. I have recorded the settlement arrived at between the
Bank of Baroda on the one side and the All India Bank of Baroda Employees
Federation and the Vadodra Rajya Bank Nokar Sangh on the other and made
an award in terms thereof on 25th December 1961 which has been published
in the Gazette of India, Part II, Section 3(ii), dated 20th January 1962 at
page 271. In view of this settlement, no further directions are necessary.
5.301. Having considered all aspects of the matter I direct that watchmen,
chowkidars and cash durwans will be entitled to receive a special allowance
of Rs. 5 per month in A Class banks, Rs. 4 per month in B Class and Rs. 3
per month in C Class banks including banks in the Excepted List under this
award. No case is made out for giving any higher amounts.
AI
BE
banks cashiers when cash is taken to or brought from the Reserve Bank or
State Bank, Treasury, etc., that they take money orders, insured letters
etc., to the post office, buy stamps, and may collect cheques, payments
etc. all within specified limits, that they may also be required to deliver or
collect valuable securities upto certain limits and that for performance of
these duties the Bombay Exchange Bank suggested a special allowance of
Rs. 5 and not for other peons working in cash departments in banks who are
merely employed to carry books, vouchers, etc., to sew note bundles and
carry cash boxes, etc., in the office.
218
Armed Guards
5.302. Another category for which the Sastry Tribunal has provided special
allowance is that of armed guards. A special allowance of Rs. 10 per month
in A Class banks, Rs. 9 per month in B Class banks, Rs. 8 per month in C
Class banks and Rs. 7 per month in D Class banks has been provided for
armed guards. Demands have been made that armed guards should be paid
a special allowance the amount whereof ranges between Rs. 15 and Rs. 20
per month. The All India State Bank of India Staff Federation has demanded
for Havaldars and Armed guards a special allowance of Rs. 30 per month.
Persons who perform the duties of armed guards will be entitled to receive
the special allowance provided for armed guards whatever their designation.
Having considered all aspects of the matter I direct that armed guards will be
entitled to receive special allowance of Rs. 10 per month in A Class banks,
Rs. 9 per month in B Class banks and Rs. 8 per month in C Class banks,
including banks in the Excepted List. No case has been made for awarding a
higher allowance.
Retainers
5.303. A special allowance of Rs. 15 has been demanded for retainers.
These are persons whose names are entered as nominees of the bank in the
gun licence taken out by the bank, so as to authorise them to carry the gun.
As the retainers normally do not carry arms, no special allowance for retainers
as such is provided. The retainers will however be entitled to receive the
219
special allowance fixed for armed guards under this award when they are
required to carry with them the arms supplied by the banks and perform the
duties of armed guards.
deputy managers of the Bank of Baroda office in Fort, Bombay, (2) managers
and accountants of the branches which are called Managers offices and (3)
branch agents. The Bank of Baroda has opposed the grant of this allowance
as it contends that by attending on the officers mentioned by the Federation,
the work of a peon does not become more responsible as he still does the
work of a peon.
Daftries
Drivers
5.307. The Sastry Tribunal has fixed a special allowance of Rs. 30/- per
month in A Class banks, Rs. 25/- per month in B Class banks, Rs. 20/- per
month in C Class banks and Rs. 18/- per month in D Class banks for drivers.
Demands have been made for the grant of a special allowance to drivers
which vary from Rs. 20/- to Rs. 50/- per month. The All India Bank Employees
Federation had, in the first instance, demanded a special allowance of Rs.
35/- for drivers, but in the course of the hearing the Federation amended its
demand and made a claim for a special pay scale of Rs. 11051356
1658265 for drivers in banks in the Federations group A banks and a
special pay scale of Rs. 10551607230 for drivers .in banks in its
group B banks. The All India State Bank of India Employees Federation has
also demanded a special scale of Rs. 175 520562357242
82829300 for drivers in the State Bank of India. The banks in general
are opposed to any special grade or grades or any increase in the existing
allowance for drivers. The Northern India Banks Association has however
submitted that drivers should be paid a special allowance of Rs. 25/- per
month. The remuneration payable to drivers generally depends upon the ability,
skill and efficiency of the drivers. What has been prescribed by the Sastry
Tribunal is the minimum special allowance payable to any driver employed
by a bank in addition to what he is entitled to get as a member of the
subordinate staff, banks being at liberty to pay a higher special allowance if
they so desire. Having considered this matter I direct that drivers will be
entitled to receive by way of special allowance Rs. 30/- per month in A Class
banks Rs. 25/- per month in B Class banks and Rs. 20/- per month in C
Class banks including banks in the Excepted List. No case has been made
out for the grant of higher special allowances to them or for separate grade or
grades for them.
BE
After considering the whole matter I direct that daftries who are members
of the subordinate staff will be entitled to receive by way of special allowance
Rs. 10/- per month in A Class banks, Rs. 9/- per month in B Class banks and
Rs. 8/- per month in C class banks including banks in the Excepted List. No
case has been made out for granting higher allowances.
5.306. No special reason has been given for a revision of the special
allowances fixed for these categories of employees. Having considered the
matter I direct that havaldars, jamadars, dafadars, naiks and head peons will
be entitled to receive by way of special allowance Rs. 15/- per month in A
Class banks Rs. 12/- per month in B Class banks and Rs. 10/- per month in
C Class banks including banks in the Excepted List.
AI
5.305. A special allowance of Rs. 15/- per month in A Class banks Rs.
12/- per month in B Class banks, Rs. 10/- per month in C Class banks and
Rs. 8/- per month in D Class banks is payable to havaldars, jamadars,
dafadars, naiks and head peons, under the existing award. The demands
now for special allowances for these categories of employees range between
the minimum and the maximum mentioned below :
Havaldars
Jamadars
Dafadars
Naiks
Head Peons
----------------
----------------
----------------
----------------
----------------
Minimum
per month
Maximum
per month
Rs.
Rs.
20
15
20
20
10
35
40
25
25
25
The Vadodra Rajya Bank Nokar Sangh has demanded Rs. 15/- per month
for Jamadars working at branches and Rs. 20/- per month for Jamadars working
at the head office and other main offices of the banks. The All India Bank of
Baroda Employees Federation by a supplementary statement has demanded
a special allowance of Rs. 20/- per month for havaldars who attend on (1)
220
Head Messengers
5.308 The Sastry Tribunal has fixed for head messengers a special
allowance of Rs. 30/- per month in A Class banks, Rs. 25/- per month in B
221
Electricians
(c)
(d)
Class banks, Rs. 20/- per month in C Class banks and Rs. 18/- per month in
D Class banks. Head messengers are employed by the State Bank and few
other banks. There is now a demand for revision of this special allowance by
raising it to Rs. 40/- by the State Bank of India Employees Association,
Bengal Circle. All other workmens organisations have demanded a special
allowance of Rs. 35/- per month. The special allowances for head messengers
are the same as those for drivers and electricians in banks. No case has
been made out for increasing the quantum of allowance which the head
messengers are now receiving. Having considered the matter I direct that
head messengers will be entitled to receive by way of special allowances of
Rs. 30/- per month in A Class banks, Rs. 25/- per month in B Class banks
and Rs. 20/- per month in C Class banks including banks in the Excepted
List. No case has been made out for the grant of higher special allowances to
them. There is a demand for a special allowance of Rs. 25/-for deputy head
messengers by the State Bank of India Employees Association (Bengal
Circle)and the State Bank of India Employees Association (Delhi Circle). No
case has been made for the grant of a special allowance to this new category
of workmen.
BE
AI
5.311. There is a small printing press in the Calcutta local head Office of
the State Bank of India wherein 2 compositors, 2 press-men, one impositor
cum-distributor and one inker have been employed. The All India State Bank
of India Staff Federation has made a claim for a special scale of pay of Rs.
17552056235724282829300 for compositors,
distributors and press-men. The State Bank of India Employees Association,
Bengal Circle, has demanded a special allowance of Rs. 50 for compositors
and a special allowance of Rs. 40 for impositors and ink-men. The State
Bank of India Employees Association, Delhi Circle, has demanded a special
allowance of Rs. 25 per month for compositors and Rs. 20 per month for
impositors and ink-men. Compositors, press-men, impositor-cum-distributors
and inkers are at present receiving emoluments payable to members of the
subordinate staff under the Sastry Award. No special allowances are granted
to them. Wage scales were first fixed for them by the Gupta Award but when
the Sastry Award came into operation, these employees opted for the scales
of pay, etc., of the Sastry Award as modified. Their position under the Sastry
Award and the Gupta Award is shown below :
Present Pay Scale under Sastry
Award, as modified
Compositor
(a)
(b)
Insurance,
222
Rs. 40254170272
(E.B. at Rs. 66/-)
Pressman
Do.
Impositor-cum-Distributor
Do.
Inker
Do.
223
Rs. 45390
Rs. 30260
Do.
Do.
Dearness allowance at Rs. 53.12 nP. per month is being drawn by the
above employees as against Rs. 25/- per month under the Gupta Award.
Impositor-cum-distributor
The State Bank of India is opposed to the special scale demanded for
compositors, distributors and pressmen. Except the inker (ink-man) the duties
of other employees require substantially higher degree of skill than the skill
required of ordinary members of the subordinate staff and it is but fair that
they should be compensated by special allowances. In the former State of
Bombay under a Notification dated 18th January 1956, the Government had
prescribed minimum wages in respect of similar categories of employees
under the Minimum Wages Act, 1948 as under :
Rs. 95/- per month.
Distributors
Helpers
Distributors
Rs. 45360
Helpers
AI
Compositors
Rs. 30260
These wage scales are effective from 1st July 1948. The dearness allowance
awarded by the Merchant Tribunal was at the following rates :
Upto Rs. 100
Rs. 101 to Rs. 150
The scheme of dearness allowance is also in force from 1st July 1948.
5.312. In view of the smallness of the printing press at the Calcutta local
head office of the State Bank of India and the nature of the duties performed
by them, I direct that compositor, pressman and impositor-cum-distributor
will be entitled to receive the following allowances :
Compositor
Press-men
224
BE
Compositors
No special allowance is fixed for the inker (ink-man) as the inker belongs
to the unskilled category of workmen and the emoluments available under
this award for a member of the subordinate staff are considered to be sufficient
remuneration. No case is made out for providing a special scale of pay for
any of these categories of workmen.
Machine Operators
5.314. An allowance of Rs. 35 has been claimed by the All India Bank
Employees Federation and few other unions for machine operators. The
employees have led no evidence about the nature of the work of the machine
operators. The Indian Banks Association has stated that the workmen had
demanded a special allowance for this category of employees before the
Sastry Tribunal also but it was not granted. No case has been made out for
the grant of a special allowance to machine operators in general and the
demand is rejected.
Cyclostyle Machine Operator
5.315. There is a demand for a special allowance of Rs. 10 for the
cyclostyle machine operators or the Gestetner machine operators. Some of
the employees who do this work are being given an allowance of Rs. 5 to Rs.
10 by some banks. Under an agreement with the workmen, the National and
Grindlays Bank Limited is paying Rs. 5 as a special allowance to duplicating
machine operators. Having regard to the nature of the work required to be
done, in my view, it is necessary that a special allowance should be provided
for those who are regularly employed to operate a Gestetner machine or a
cyclostyling machine. I accordingly direct that a cyclostyle machine operator
regularly employed to operate such machine will be entitled to receive a
225
special allowance of Rs. 5 per month in A Class banks, of Rs. 4 per month in
B Class banks and Rs. 3 per month in C Class banks including banks in the
Excepted List.
Typewriter Mechanics
5.316. A special allowance of Rs. 35 was first demanded by the All India
Bank Employees Federation and some unions but by an amendment of the
claim, the Federation has demanded a clerical scale for this category of
employees also. No evidence has been led and no case has been made out
for the grant of a special allowance or a special grade for them and the
demand is rejected.
AI
Guaranteed Peons
BE
Liftmen
the hundies etc., and to carry intimations, etc., be classed as hundi presenters
and paid a special allowance at the rate of Rs. 10/- per month. The All India
Bank Employees Federation has demanded that employees designated as
hundi presenters should be placed in the clerical grade, but, at the same
time, it has also demanded a special allowance of Rs. 20/- per month for
them. By and large, there is a demand for special allowance varying between
Rs. 10/- and Rs. 20/- per month for hundi presenters. At the time of the
hearing, it was stated that hundi presenters are of two types, (1) hundi
presenters who are clerks, for whom a clerical grade has been demanded
and (2) hundi presenters belonging to the subordinate staff, for whom a special
allowance has been demanded. The All India Bank Employees Association
submitted that under the Sen Award, the hundi presenters and bill collectors
were placed in a scale in between the clerks and the subordinate staff, but
the Sastry Award omitted to prescribe any special allowance for them it is
also stated that in practice, several banks are allowing a special allowance of
Rs. 5/- to Rs. 10/- per mensem to the hundi presenters and bill collectors.
The All India Bank Employees Association has given a list of 23 banks wherein
clerical salaries are being paid to employees designated as hundi presenters
or bill collectors. A list of banks has also been furnished wherein a special
allowance of Rs. 5/- is being paid to hundi presenters and bill collectors. In
the case of Punjab National Bank it has been pointed out that the bank
provides an intermediary pay-scale i.e. the average of the clerks salary and
the peons salary.The New Bank of India pays Rs. 10/-per mensem to hundi
presenters and bill collectors. The All India Bank Employees Federation has
submitted that the hundi presenters for whom a special allowance of
Rs. 20/- had been demanded, present hundies and intimations of bills and
documents to the constituents and secure their acceptance. The Indian Banks
Association has stated that the hundi presenters present bills or cheques
drawn on local parties to them and obtain their acceptance, where necessary,
and normally bills are payable at the banks counter. About bill collectors,
the Association has stated that they collect payment of bills drawn on local
parties and that usually payment of such bills is made by the parties by
cheques. The Association does not think that there is any special skill or
responsibility involved in the work of hundi presenters and bill collectors.
About the hundi presenters and bill collectors the Bombay Exchange Bank
has stated that these are members of the subordinate staff who present bills
of exchange on local parties within certain areas and their work is of the
same nature as that of dak peons. They submit that clerical grade was not
justified for this category of employees. It has stated that normally all bills
are payable by the parties at the bank and in a few cases where it is necessary
to collect payment, the work is generally performed by a clerk.
5.318. The All India Bank Employees Association and several other
workmens organisations have demanded a special allowance of Rs. 10 per
month for guaranteed peons. The Allahabad Bank Employees Union has
demanded a special allowance of Rs. 15 per month for them. The All India
Bank Employees Federation has demanded that they should be placed in
the clerical grade. According to thebanks, guaranteed peons perform the
ordinary duties of a member of the subordinate staff in the cash department
and they are called guaranteed peons because faithful performance of duties
by them is guaranteed by the chief cashiers. No case has been made out for
the grant of a special allowance or a special grade for them, and the demand
is rejected.
Hundi presenters and Bill collectors
5.319. The All India Bank Employees Association has submitted that
persons carrying on the duties of a clerical nature or of the nature of a
cashier, i.e., presenting hundies, bills etc., and receiving cash on behalf of
the banks, be classed as clerks and where nature of job is only to present
226
5.320. Persons who are called hundi presenters and bill collectors do
different work in different banks. There is no standardisation of duties. The
work of some of them involves a greater degree of responsibility than that of
227
Assistant Jamadars
Categories of employees
Class of banks
A
B
C
Rs.
Rs.
Rs.
AI
BE
5.321. An allowance of Rs. 20/- per month has been generally demanded
for assistant jamadars. The State Bank of India Employees Association,
(Bengal Circle), and the State Bank of India Employees Association (Delhi
Circle) have demanded a special allowance of Rs. 25/- per month. Some
banks are paying a special allowance of Rs. 15 per month to assistant
jamadars, assistant havildars and naiks. It is urged that the duties of assistant
jamadars are the same as those of the naiks. No evidence has been led
about the same. If that be so, the category of naiks will cover them. No case
has been made out for providing a special allowance for a new category of
workmen.
Record Suppliers, Sorters in the Stationery Department and those in
charge of Record
228
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
4
4
9
9
12
3
3
8
8
10
25
25
20
20
10
The special allowances prescribed above for C Class banks will also be
payable to employees in banks in the Excepted List. The special allowances
prescribed above would be in supersession of those prescribed under the
Sastry Award as modified. When an employee falls within more than one
category, he would be entitled to receive the special allowance at the higher
rate applicable to him. The general observations made in the case of the
other categories of workmen in connection with special allowances will also
apply to the members of the subordinate staff.
229
point to point basis having regard to the length of service of the employees to
compensate them for the inadequate increments in the past and greater
family responsibilities of senior employees, that a large number of employees
have not been given increments on account of their having reached the
maximum of the grade for a number of years, that they should also be given
special increments and adjusted in the revised grades and that in the revised
scales of pay, in any event efficiency bar should not be applied while adjusting
the salaries of the employees. They have stated that the adjustments granted
in the modified Sastry Award were not adequate, more so for the senior
employees.
5.332. The All India State Bank of India Staff Federation, the State Bank
of India Staff Union, Andhra Pradesh and the All India Bank of Baroda
Employees Federation have made claims in this respect similar to those of
the All India Bank Employees Association.
AI
BE
(1) The present salary for the purpose of adjustment shall mean the
salary which an employee would be drawing on the date from which
this Honourable Tribunals award would be made effective;
(2) In no case the present salary of an employee shall be reduced;
(3) As regards the monetary benefits enjoyed by the employees in
any case and at no stage of an employees career should his total
emoluments be less than the totality of such benefits under the
existing scheme, rule or Awards and the subject to this principle a
bank may be allowed to adjust such benefits in the light of the
requirements of this Tribunals Award.
(4) If the salary of an employee will be less than the minimum of the
new scale of pay which would be made applicable to him his present
salary should be brought upto the minimum of the new pay scale in
the first instance.
(5) Then all employees should be fitted in the new scales of pay at a
point corresponding to the number of years of service they have put
in the respective grades.
(6) Where a workman has received an additional increment or
increments in his basic pay at the initial start or by way of special
promotion later on his length of service shall be taken to be the
period which would ordinarilly be necessary to bring the workman
with the usual initial start without additional increments to that basic
pay as on 31st January, 1950 in the then existing scale.
230
231
5.341. The State Bank of Patiala has submitted that the demand for
point to point adjustment was unreasonable and unacceptable, that the
unreasonableness of the demand was accentualed by the further demand
that pay should include basic pay plus dearness pay, latter pay being one of
the peculiar features in the bank. The bank has submitted that in the case of
existing employees, the adjustment granted in 1958 was generous and that
there was no need to grant any more adjustment.
BE
5.337. The Indian Banks Association has submitted that the method of
adjustment suggested by the employees showed that what they wanted was
not only point to point adjustment but something more. It has stated that
numerous Industrial Tribunals have time and again rejected the demand for
point to point adjustment. It has further stated that there was no scope whatever
for any adjustment, much less point to point adjustment.
AI
5.339 The Bombay Exchange Banks Association has pleaded that the
workmen were not only claiming point to point adjustment in the grade but
desire their emoluments in excess of such adjustment to be protected. It has
submitted that there was no case for considering a revision of existing pay
scales and the question of adjustment, therefore, did not arise, that assuming
that the Tribunal was disposed to make some revision in the scale, in view of
the fact that time or incremental scales have been in existence and suitable
adjustments were made by the Sastry Award as modified, no question could
arise of any adjustment and certainly not point to point adjustment in the
grade, and that if there was to be an adjustment at all, it should merely be to
fit the workman in the scale if he was not in a step in the scale on the date
fixed in the Award. It has submitted that Industrial Tribunals grant or refuse to
grant adjustments on certain well-settled principles, that the first principle is
that as a rule, point to point adjustment should not be allowed and the second
principle is that adjustments by way of granting increments should only be
considered if the facts are that there have either been no scales of wages in
existence before and workmen have not received reasonable increments or
the scales are radically revised and the adjudicator is of opinion thal the
workmen have not received a fair deal in the past and that in the present case
none of the above principles can be invoked and therefore in the circumstances
no question arises of adjustment.
5.340. The State Bank of India has submitted that point to point
232
5.342. The Northern India Banks Association has submitted that the
method of adjustment of the salaries as provided under the Sastry Award
was fair and equitable and that no deviation for it be made. It has also submitted
that the wage structure of employees in the banking industry was fixed on
the basis of time scale, that if a new time scale was fixed in accordance with
the suggestion made by them, each employee should be given a basic wage
in the new scale corresponding to his wage at the time of introduction of the
new scale and that in cases when no exact fitting of the employees wage
was possible, he should be entitled to the next higher step in the scale.
5.343. As regards the adjustment on upgradation of a bank the
Association has submitted that movements to the higher class should involve
only the raising of the minimum starting salary applicable to a bank of that
class, that the acceptance of the proposal made by the All India Bank
Employees Association would impose an unconscionably huge burden on
the bank, which would greatly cripple its earning capacity, that this is all the
more so because the movement of a bank to a higher class is nearly in all
cases the result of a programme of expansion and development, which itself
inevitably involves an abnormal increase in expenditure, and that apart from
the individual interest of the bank, it is in the larger national interest that such
a proposal be not accepted, as development or banking would thereby be
233
seriously hampered
5.344. The National Bank of Lahore Ltd. has submitted that the method
of adjustment claimed was too much one-sided, that the application of the
benefits of the award retrospectively was rather not in keeping with good
business and that the method of adjustment should be such which was in
consonance with justice, both to the employer and the employee. The bank
has further submitted that all benefits awarded to the workmen should be
made applicable only prospectively.
BE
5 346. The Bharatha Lakshmi Bank has submitted that it was willing to
accept items (1) to (4) of the claim presented by the All India Bank Employees
Association. It has further submitted that items (5) and (6) for weightage etc.
should not be made applicable to it. The Jaya Laxmi Bank has submitted
that if an employee at present gets less than the minimum as per the new
award, he should be fitted into the grade without giving any retrospective
effect.
stage to stage adjustment basis i.e. a workman who was drawing a basic
pay at particular stage in the time scale provided by the Sastry Award as
modified hereinafter called the existing scale will draw the basic pay at the
same stage in the new scale applicable to him provided under this award. A
workman may have reached a particular stage in the existing scale as a
result of years of service put in by him or as a result of any extra or advance
increments that may have been given to him or as result of his progress
being retarded by reason of disciplinary or other action taken against him by
way of stoppage of increments in the past. There may be other circumstances
affecting him which might account for the particular stage in an existing
scale reached by him. Whatever may be the stage which he may have
reached in the existing scale as on 1st January 1962 will be the stage in the
new scale of pay in which he will be fitted. In order to arrive at the basic pay
of a workman as on 1st January 1962 in the new scale of pay the number of
stages which the workman has covered in the existing scale will be deemed
to have been covered by the workman in the new scale of pay e.g. a clerk
employed in an A Class bank in Area I who was entitled on 1st January 1962
to a basic pay of Rs. 140 which is at the 10th stage in the existing scale of
pay viz. Rs. 85-5-100-6-112-7-140-8-164-9-227 E.B.-9 -245-10-265-15-280
will be entitled as on 1st January 1962 to a basic pay of Rs. 204 which is at
the 10th stage in the new scale of pay applicable to him, viz. Rs. 140-6-18211-281-13-307-15-322-E.B.-15-337-16-369-18-405. If by any chance a
workman in the existing scale of pay is drawing by way of basic pay an
amount which does not concide with any particular stage in the existing
scale of pay but it falls between two stages in the scale of pay, then he will
be deemed to have reached the higher stage in the scale of pay.
AI
234
235
now falling within the Excepted List of banks will be fitted in the new scales
of pay applicable to banks in the Excepted List.
(iv)
(v)
BE
5.354. The workmen will as on 1st January 1962 be first filled in the
appropriate scales of pay provided under the Sastry Award as modified having
regard to the working funds of the banks concerned and having regard to the
places where the workmen were employed. Thus the workmen of the American
Express Co. Inc. employed in its office at Bombay will have to be fitted into
the pay scales applicable to A Class Banks in Area I under the Sastry Award
as modified.
5.355. After the workmen have been notionally so fitted, they will again
be refitted into the new scales of pay provided under this award on the basis
of the provisions applicable to workmen in the first group set out above.
AI
5.356. For the purpose of fitting the workmen into the scales of pay
provided under the Sastry Award as modified I am giving directions similar to
those provided under the Sastry Award as modified subject to certain changes
which I consider to be necessary having regard to the lapse of time after the
coming into force of the provisions of the Sastry Award as modified. For the
aforesaid purpose of fitting the workmen in the scales of pay provided by the
Sastry Award as modified, I give the following directions :
For workmen who entered service of the bank before 1st January 1959.
(i)
236
Subject to rules (i) to (iii) a workmans basic pay in the scale provided
by the Sastry Award as modified shall be fixed in the following
manner :
(a) A workman shall first be fitted into the scale of pay of Sastry
Award as modified by placing him at the stage in the Sastry
Award scale as modified equal to, or next above his basic
pay as on 1st January 1959 in the scale then in force in the
bank concerned (hereinafter called the banks scale).
(b) To the basic pay into which he is fitted under clause (a) annual
increment or increments in scale provided by the Sastry Award
as modified as from that stage onwards should be added at
the rate of one increment for every completed three years of
his service in the same cadre as on 1st January 1959.
(c) Such increments shall not however exceed four in number.
(d) After adjustments are made in accordance with clauses (a),
(b) and (c) supra, two further annual increments in the scale
provided by the Sastry Award as modified will be added thereto
for service for the two years of 1960 and 1961.
(a)
5.357. The provisions contained in the aforesaid clauses (iv) (b) and (iv)
(c) will, however, not apply to the employees of the American Express Co.
Inc. This bank would fall in Class A. Even under the provisions of the Sastry
Award as modified the corresponding provisions were not applicable to banks
falling in Class A. I direct that so far as the employees of the American
Express Co. Inc. are concerned, the following provisions will be substituted
237
for the aforesaid provisions contained in clauses (iv) (b) and (iv) (c) :(4)
To the basic pay into which he is fitted under clause (a) the annual
increment or increments in the scale provided by the Sastry Award
as modified as from that stage onwards should be added at the
rate of one increment for every completed three years of service in
the same cadre as on 1st January 1959 upto a limit of twelve years
service; thereafter one increment, for every four years of service
upto another eight years service, and after that one increment for
every five years of service.
AI
BE
General rules.
(I) Even after the final adjustment of workmen in the first group and in
the second group in the new scales of pay, the efficiency bar in the
new scale may apply, but only if the stage for applying it has not
been already reached.
(2) Under the provisions of the Sastry Award as modified, two additional
increments in the basic scales of pay have been given for graduation
and one increment for passing Part I of the C.A.I.I.B. and C.A.I.B.
examinations and another for passing Part II of the aforesaid
examinations. The workmen who have not received any such
increments will be entitled to be credited with increments as provided
in the Sastry Award as modified if they have graduated or passed
Part I or Part II of the aforesaid examinations prior to 1st January
1962. Where, however, in any banks scale graduates and/or
persons who have passed the aforesaid examinations have been
started on a higher scale of basic pay, the additional increments
granted for graduation or for passing of such examinations are not
to be credited.
(3) Wherever as a result of the adjustment or adjustments as directed
above the total emoluments under the new scales made up of basic
pay, dearness allowance, special allowance and house rent
allowance fall short of the total emoluments of any workman under
the above heads as on 1st January 1962, the difference shall be
given to him by way of an additional allowance to be called
temporary adjustment allowance until such difference is fully
absorbed by future increments in the new scale of pay. (The right
of any bank to stop annual increments is not to be affected by this
For workmen who joined the service of the bank on or after Ist January,
1959.
The workman shall be fitted into the scale of pay provided by the
Sastry Award as modified on a point to point basis as though it had
been in force since he joined the service of the bank, provided that
his adjusted basic pay is not less than what it would be under a
point to point adjustment on the corresponding banks scale.
rule).
For the purpose of making the requisite adjustments and making
payments on account thereof, banks shall have a maximum period
of five months time from the date when this award becomes
enforceable under the provisions of section 17A of the Industrial
Disputes Act, 1947.
238
5.360. Provisions similar to those laid down above will apply mutatis
mutandis when a place subsequently falls within a higher or a lower area.
5.361. As regards workmen who have joined service between 1st January
1962 and the date when this award becomes enforceable under the provisions
of section 17A of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, they will be fitted into the
new scales of pay on the same principles as those set out above from the
dates when they respectively joined service.
(xxvi) Reliefs
5.362. As a result of the abolition of separate Area IV, if no relief was
granted to banks other than banks in the Excepted List, there would be a
sudden rise in the burden which the banks would have to bear in connection
239
with basic pay and dearness allowance and in connection with provident fund
contribution and other benefits granted to workmen which are dependent on
the amount of basic pay. At the all-India working class consumer price index
No. 123 (1949 = 100), the total emoluments consisting of basic pay and
dearness allowance which would be payable to the members of the clerical
staff and the subordinate staff in Area IV in the first year of service by various
classes of banks under the Sastry Award, as modified are given in the table
below. The total emoluments consisting of basic pay and dearness allowance
that would be payable to those very employees except those employed in
banks in the Excepted List at the same index number under this award, if no
relief was granted, are also indicated in the said table.
Total emoluments under this
award payable in the 1st
year of service in Area III,
if no relief was granted.
CLASS OF BANKS
B
C-1
C-2
Clerical Sttaff
99.90
90.90
87.90
87.90
57.00
42.50
42.50
Subordinate staff
65.25
40.50
BE
88.80
81.60
19.60
74.40
AI
In view of the large difference between the two sets of emoluments, I consider
that the burden should not fall upon the banks all of a sudden but should fall
gradually, so that the banks should be able to adjust themselves to the new
scales of pay and dearness allowance. I accordingly direct that all workmen
who immediately prior to the date when this award becomes enforceable
under the provisions of section 17-A of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 were
entitled to receive basic pay according to the scales of pay applicable to
Area IV under the Sastry Award as modified should, after they are fitted in
the new scales of pay applicable to Area III, be paid by way of basic pay and
dearness allowance, (i) from 1st January 1962 till the end of the year 1962,
20 per cent less than what they would otherwise have received but for the
relief hereby granted, (ii) from 1st January 1956 till the end of the year 1963,
15 per cent less than what they would then have been entitled to receive if no
relief had been granted from the very commencement (i.e. from 1st January
1962), (iii) from 1st January 1964 till the end of the year 1964, 10 per cent
less than what they would then have been entitled to receive if no relief had
been granted from the very commencement (i.e. from 1st January 1962), and
(iv) from 1st January 1965 till the end of the year 1965, 5 per cent less than
what they would then have been entitled to re-receive if no relief had been
granted from the very commencement (ie) from 1st January 1962). From and
after 1st January 1966 they will receive the same amount which they would
240
5.363. In order that there may not be any distinction between workmen
who may be newly employed by banks for service at places in erstwhile Area
IV during the aforesaid years 1962,1963, 1964 and 1965 after the date when
this award becomes enforceable and the workmen who were in employment
of banks upto that date, I direct that banks will be entitled to pay to all such
newly recruited workmen working at places in the erstwhile Area IV for the
aforesaid years the same amounts which are directed to be paid to workmen
referred to in the preceding paragraph working at places in erstwhile Area IV.
This relief will also provide an incentive to banks to open branches in erstwhile
Area IV during the Third Five Year Plan period.
otherwise have received but for the reliefs hereby granted. The reliefs provided
as aforesaid will also be available in respect of workmen to whom the
provisions of the Sastry Award as modified do not apply and who were
employed at places falling within Area IV immediately prior to the date when
this Award becomes enforceable. Notwithstanding anything herein contained
no such workman will be paid a lesser amount by way of total emoluments
consisting of basic pay and dearness allowance than what he would have
received if this award was not made applicable to him. The amount of such
difference will be paid to him by way of special adjustment allowance until
the same is fully absorbed by reason of the increasing amounts becoming
payable to him by way of basic pay and dearness allowance under this
award.
5.364. Lower scales of pay have been provided for workmen employed in
banks in the Excepted List. The reliefs provided in the preceding paragraphs
will not therefore be available to such banks.
5.365. The reliefs provided in the preceding paragraphs will not be available
in respect of workmen who have been transferred from places in higher areas
whose basic pay in accordance with the scales of pay applicable to higher
areas is protected.
241
AI
BE
bank would not find any difficulty in implementing the Labour Appellate
Tribunals decision with retrospective effect from 1st April 1954.
January 1962 till the end of the year 1962, 6 per cent less than what they
would otherwise have received but for the relief hereby granted, (ii) from 1st
January 1963 till the end of the year 1963, 6 per cent less than what they
would then have been entitled to receive if no relief had been granted from the
very commencement (i.e. from 1st January 1962), (iii) from 1st January 1964
till the end of the year 1964, 4 per cent less than what they would then have
been entitled to receive if no relief had been granted from the very
commencement (i.e from 1st January 1962), (iv) from 1st January 1965 till
the end of the year 1965, 2 per cent less than what they would then have
been entitled to receive if no relief had been granted from the very
commencement (i.e. from 1st January 1962). From and after 1st January
1966 they will receive the same amount which they would otherwise have
received but for the reliefs hereby granted.
242
243
as pay for Central Government employees who were in receipt of pay not
exceeding Rs. 750 per month for the purpose of retirement benefits, certain
allowances, etc. Subsequent events have proved that the Gadgil Committee
was rather conservative in its estimate. The cost of living has increased to
such an extent that at present all india working class consumer price index
number is 456 with base 1939 = 100.
Up to Rs. 50
Thereafter up to Rs. 100
Thereafter up to Rs. 150
Bank
Area
Rate
Minimum
per month
Maximum
per month
A, B. C & D ...
35
70
A, B, C & D ...
II
30
60
A, B, C & D ...
III
25
40
Subordinate Staff
Bank
Area I
Area II
Area Ill
Rs. 25 flat per month Rs. 22-8-0 flat per month Rs. 20 flat per month
For the aforesaid purpose pay meant the aggregate of basic pay, special
allowance and officiating allowance, if any.
In order to provide for an automatic adjustment of the rates of dearness
allowance according to the variations in the cost of living in future, the Sastry
Tribunal provided that if the average figure for each half year, i.e. from January
to June and from July to December, of each calender year, should rise or fall
by more than 10 points over 144 the dearness allowance for the succeeding
half year should rise or fall by 7 per cent of the basic pay. For the purpose
of calculating dearness allowance, the figure officially published in the Indian
Labour Gazette was to be taken as the correct index figure.
BE
AI
5.373. The Labour Appellate Tribunal retained the framework of the above
scheme of dearness allowance but altered the figures with a view to achieve
a fair measure of nutralisation. The dearness allowance under the Labour
Appellate Tribunal scheme was as follows :
Clerks
Thereafter
5 per cent.
This scheme in its actual working revealed such great anomalies that both
the banks and the workmen felt dissatisfied with it. The cost of living index
numbers were not available for all the places where bank employees were
working. Often the cost of living index number for the nearest place for which
it was available, did not properly reflect the real cost of living of the place
where the workmen worked. For the whole of Uttar Pradesh for instance the
only index figure available was that for Kanpur. The SastryTribunal awarded
the following rates of dearness allowance for A, B, C and D Class of banks in
244
Minimum
Maximum
First slab of Rs. 100
Second slab of Rs.100
Thereafter
:
:
:
50 per cent
40 per cent.
35 per cent.
Rs. 45/-
:
:
:
45 per cent.
35 per cent.
30 per cent.
Rs.40/-
:
:
:
40 per cent.
30 per cent.
25 per cent.
Area I
Rs. 50/-
Area II
Area III
245
If the average all-India cost of living index for the half year ending
June or December of any year should rise or fall by more than 10
points as compared to 144 (1944 = 100) the dearness allowance
for the succeeding half year will be raised or lowered by one-tenth
of the dearness allowance admissible at the index level of 144 for
each variation of 10 points.
Minimum
Maximum
Area I
Rs. 35
Rs. 70
Area II
Rs. 30
Rs. 60
Area III
Rs. 25
Rs. 40
The rates of dearness allowance with the alterations mentioned above are
still in force, but the adjustment formula of dearness allowance has undergone
a slight change as a result of the Government notification S. O. 400, dated
13th February I960.
Subordinate Staff
Area I
Area II
Area III
Class A Banks
Rs. 42-8-0
Rs. 40-0-0
Rs. 37-8-0
Class B Banks
Rs. 40-0-0
Rs. 37-8-0
Rs. 35-0-0
Class C Banks
Rs. 37-8-0
Rs. 35-0-0
Rs. 32-8-0
Class D Banks
Rs. 13-0-0
Rs. 12-0-0
Rs. 10-0-0
AI
246
Maximum
Rate
Minimum
Maximum
Rate
50%
40%
35%
Rs.35/-
Rs. 70/-
33 1/3%
45%
35%
30%
Rs. 30/-
Rs. 60/-
33 1/3%
40%
30%
25%
Rs. 25/-
Rs. 40/-
33 1/3%
Rs. 25/-
Rs. 40/-
33 1/3%
BE
Area II
Area III
Area IV
Rs.
Rs.
Rs.
Rs.
A Class Banks
42/50
40/-
37/50
25/-
B Class Banks
40/-
37/50
35/-
20/-
C 1 Class Banks
37/50
35/-
32/50
10/-
15/-
12/-
10/-
10/-
D Class Banks
13/-
12/-
10/-
10/-
247
If the average all-India cost of living index for any quarter after the
31st March, 1959 should rise or fall by more than five points as
compared to 144 (1944 = 100), the dearness allowance payable for
the succeeding quarter shall be raised or lowered, in the case of
clerical staff by one-fourteenth, and in the case of sub ordinate
staff by one-twentieth, of the dearness allowance admissible at the
index level of 144 for each variation of five points.
5.377. It is not possible to find out the extent of neutralisation which was
sought to be given as neither the Sastry Tribunal nor the Labour Appellate
Tribunal has given any indication about it.
AI
The All India State Bank of India Staff Federation has claimed that the
employees are entitled to full neutralisation and that dearness allowance
should be paid on the basis of such full neutralisation for every rise of one
point above 100 with base 1949=100. The State Bank of India Employees
Association (Bengal Circle) and the State Bank of India Employees
Association (Delhi Circle) have claimed that the all-India cost of living index
should be taken as the basis for calculation of the dearness allowance and
that the dearness allowance should be paid at the rate of 1 1/2 per cent of
pay for every rise of 5 points over the cost of living index figure 360 (1939
=100). The State Bank of India Staff Union, Andhra Pradesh, Vijayawada,
claims that the basic pay of an employee should be fixed at the cost of living
index of 360 (1939=100) and that for every rise of index by a point the rate of
dearness allowance should be Re. 0.35. The All India Bank of Baroda
Employees Federation has claimed that any rise above the all-India consumer
248
... ...
40 per cent.
30 per cent.
Upto Rs.100
...
BE
5.378. The All India Bank Employees Association has claimed that the
base year should be the year 1956 when the all India working class consumer
price index in the series 1949 = 100 was 105 and that dearness allowance
should be paid to the employees at the rate of 1 per cent of the basic pay for
every rise of one point over 105. The All India Bank Employees Federation
has made a demand as follows :
...
Subordinate Staff.
... ...
... ...
50 per cent.
The Association has further claimed that in view of the continuous rise in
the cost of living index, the entire amount of dearness allowance payable to
an employee should be merged into his basic pay.
5.379. The Cochin Commercial Bank Employees Association has
demanded the following dearness allowance :
"(a) (1)
Officers
(2)
Clerical Staff
(3)
Subordinate Staff
249
pay favoured.
The Allahabad Bank Employees Union (Calcutta) and the South Gujarat Bank
of Baroda Employees Union (Surat) have demanded that dearness allowance
should be paid at the rate of 1 per cent of pay on every rise of 5 points over
the cost of living index figure 360 (1939=100). The Bihar Provincial Central
Bank of India Employees Association (Muzaffarpur), the Central Bank of
India Employees Association at Patna, Amritsar and Muzaffarpur have
demanded a dearness allowance of 75 per cent with a minimum of Rs. 60 to
all the various categories. The Central Bank of India Employees Association
at Patna claims that 50 per cent of the dearness allowance should be merged
with basic pay. The Employees Association of the Union Bank of Bijapur and
Sholapur, has made the same demands for dearness allowance as the All
India Bank Employees Association.
AI
BE
5.381. The Indian Banks Association has claimed that wherever the
dearness allowance is linked with the cost of living index figure, it should be
calculated not on the basis of the immediate previous quarter but on the
figure available for the quarter preceding the last quarter so that numerous
calculations and re-calculations may be avoided. The Exchange Banks
Association has pleaded that it would be convenient to take the all-India
consumer price index number (1949 =100) as published in the Indian Labour
Journal for any of the quarters ending March, June, September and December
of any year for adjustment relating to the succeeding quarters ending
September, December, March and June, respectively. The State Bank of
India has pleaded that if there is a fall in the purchasing power of the rupee,
such fall is common to the entire nation and to every member of the community
and it is wrong in principle and in equity that only a section of the community,
to which the bank employees, should seek relief which must ultimately be at
the cost of the entire community and lead to still further inflation.
5.380. The banks have opposed these demands and want that the present
scheme of dearness allowance should be allowed to continue except for
slight modification of the adjustment formula for the facility of calculation.
5.383 I have already provided scales of pay with the year 1949 as the
base year. These scales of pay are much higher than the previous scales
and a considerable part of the existing dearness allowance has been merged
in the basic pay. I have now only to consider what should be the dearness
allowance taking into account the wage scales provided by me.
5.382. Shri Phadke, the learned counsel on behalf of the Indian Banks
Association, has urged that the third item of reference relates to dearness
allowance with particular Reference to the question whether any part of the
existing dearness allowance should be absorbed in the basic pay, that having
regard to the terms of Reference, it is not open to me to disturb the existing
scheme of dearness allowance and that I have only to consider whether any
part of the existing dearness allowance should be absorbed in the basic pay.
There is no merit in this contention. Item 3 of the reference provides for
adjudication of the dispute in connection with dearness allowance. The mere
particularisation of the question relating to the merger of the existing dearness
allowance does not limit the scope of the dispute relating to dearness
allowance. Apart from any other consideration, if it is ultimately found that a
large part of the dearness allowance should be absorbed in the basic pay,
250
251
252
253
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
7
8
9
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
...
...
400
...
...
...
300
...
...
...
200
...
...
...
Rs
100
...
Basic salary
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Rs.
12.00
9.00
6.00
3.00
2.70
2.40
2.10
1.80
1.50
1.20
0.90
0.60
0.30
0.27
0.24
0.21
0.18
0.15
0.12
0.09
0.06
0.03
Rs.
24.00
18.00
12.00
6.00
5.40
4 .80
4 .20
3.60
3.00
2.40
1.80
1.20
0.60
0.54
0.48
0.42
0.36
0.30
0.24
0.18
0.12
0.06
Rs.
36.00
27.00
18.00
9.00
8.10
7.20
6.30
5.40
4.50
3.60
2.70
1.80
0.90
0.81
0.72
0.63
0.54
0.45
48.00
36.00
24.00
12.00
10.80
9.60
8.40
7.20
6.00
4.80
3.60
2.40
1.20
1.08
0.96
0.84
0.72
0.60
0.48
0.36
0.24
0.12
Rs.
0.60
0.45
0.30
0.15
Rs.
0.72
0.54
0.36
0.18
Rs.
60.00
45.00
30.00
15.00
13.50
12.00
10.50
9.00
7.50
6.00
4.50
3.00
1.50
1.35
1.20
1.05
0.90
0.75
72.00
54.00
36.00
18.00
16.20
14.40
12.60
10.80
9.00
7.20
5.40
3.60
1.80
1.62
1.44
1.26
1.08
0.90
0.84
0.63
0.42
0.21
Rs.
2.16
1.92
1.68
1.44
1.20
0.96
0.72
0.48
0.24
Rs.
10
84.00
63.00
42.00
21.00
18.90
16.80
14.70
12.60
10.50
8.40
6.30
4.20
2.10
96.00
72.00
48.00
24.00
21.60
19.20
16.80
14.40
12.00
9.60
7.20
4.80
2.40
1.89
1.68
1.47
1.26
1.05
BE
AI
0.36
0.27
0.18
0.09
Rs.
108.00
81.00
54.00
27.00
24.30
21.60
18.90
16.20
13.50
10.80
8.10
5.40
2.70
2.43
2.16
1.89
1.62
1.35
1.08
0.81
0.54
0.27
Rs.
11
99.00
66.00
33.00
29.70
26.40
23.10
19.80
16.50
13.20
9.90
6.60
3.30
2.97
2.64
2.31
1.98
1.65
1.32
0.99
0.66
0.33
Rs.
13
108.00
72.00
36.00
32.40
28.30
25.20
21.60
18.00
14.40
10.80
7.20
3.60
3.24
2.88
2.52
2.16
1.80
1.44
1.08
0.72
0.36
Rs.
14
90.00
60.00
30.00
27.00
24.00
21.00
18.00
15.00
12,00
9.00
6.00
3.00
2.70
2.40
2.10
1.80
1.50
1.20
0.90
0.60
0.30
Rs.
12
156.00
117.00
78.00
39.00
35.10
31.20
27.30
23.40
19.50
15.60
11.70
7.80
3.90
3.51
3.12
2.73
2.34
1.95
1.56
1.17
0.78
0.39
Rs.
15
Less 104 or 108 or 112 or 116 or 120 or 124 or 128 or 132 or 136 or 140 or 144 or 148 or 152 or
than more
more more
more
more
more more
more
more
more more more
more
104 but less but less but less but less but less but less but less but less but less but less but less but less but less
than
than
than
than
than
than
than
than
than
than
than
than
than
108
112
116
120
124
128
132
136
140
144
148
152
156
Table for calculation of Dearness Allowance for workmen other than those belonging tothe Subordinate Staff
Dearness Allowance @ 3 per cent for every change of 4 points in the quarterly average of the All India Average Consumer
Price Index (General) (Base 1949=100).
254
255
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
...
...
10
150
...
...
...
140
...
...
...
130
...
...
...
120
...
3.
...
...
110
...
...
...
Rs
100
...
Basic salary
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Nil
Rs.
6.00
5.60
5.20
4.80
4.40
4.00
3.60
3.20
2.80
2.40
2.00
1.60
1.20
0.80
0.40
0.36
0.32
0.28
0.24
0.20
0.16
0.12
0.08
0.04
Rs.
12.00
11.20
10.40
9.60
8.80
8.00
7.20
6.40
5.60
4.80
4.00
3.20
2.40
1.60
0.80
0.72
0.64
0.56
0.48
0.40
0.32
0.24
0.16
0.08
Rs.
18.00
16.80
15.60
14.40
13.20
12.00
10.80
9.60
8.40
7.20
6.00
4.80
3.60
2.40
1.20
1.08
0.96
0.84
0.72
0.60
24.00
22.40
20.80
19.20
17.60
16.00
14.40
12.80
11.20
9.60
8.00
6.40
4.80
3.20
1.60
1.44
1.28
1.12
0.96
0.80
0.64
0.48
0.32
0.16
Rs.
0.80
0.60
0.40
0.20
Rs.
0.96
0.72
0.48
0.24
Rs.
30.00
28.00
26.00
24.00
22.00
20.00
18.00
16.00
14.00
12.00
10.00
8.00
6.00
4.00
2.00
1.80
1.60
1.40
1.20
1.00
36.00
33.60
31.20
28.80
26.40
24.00
21.60
19.20
16.80
14.40
12.00
9.60
7.20
4.80
2.40
2.16
1.92
1.68
1.44
1.20
1.12
0.84
0.56
0.28
Rs.
2.88
2.56
2.24
1.92
1.60
1.28
0.96
0.64
0.32
Rs.
10
42.00
39.20
36.40
33.60
30.80
28.00
25.20
22.40
19.60
16.80
14.00
11.20
8.40
5.60
2.80
48.00
44.80
41.60
38.40
35.20
32.00
28.80
25.60
22.40
19.20
16.00
12.80
9.60
8.40
3.20
2.52
2.24
1.96
1.68
1.40
BE
AI
0.48
0.36
0.24
0.12
Rs.
54.00
50.40
46.80
43.20
39.60
36.00
32.40
28.80
25.20
21.60
18.00
14.40
10.80
7.20
3.60
3.24
2.88
2.52
2.16
1.80
1.44
1.08
0.72
0.36
Rs.
11
60.00.
56.00
52.00
48.00
44.00
40.00
36.00
32.00
28.00
24.00
20.00
16.00
12.00
8.00
4.00
3.60
3.20
2.80
2.40
2.00
1.60
1.20
0.80
0.40
Rs.
12
66.00
61.60
57.20
52.80
48.40
44.00
39.60
35.20
30.80
26.40
22.00
17.60
13.20
8.80
4.40
3.96
3.52
3.08
2.64
2.20
1.76
1.32
0.88
0.44
Rs.
13
72.00
67.20
62.40
57.60
52.80
48.00
43.20
38.40
33.60
28.80
24.00
19.20
14.40
9.60
4.80
4.32
3.84
3.36
2.88
2.40
1.92
1.44
0.96
0.48
Rs.
14
78.00
72.80
67.60
62.40
57.20
52.00
46.80
41.60
36.40
31.20
26.00
20.80
15.60
10.40
5.20
4.68
4.16
3.64
3.12
2.60
2.08
1.56
1.04
0.52
Rs.
15
Less 104 or 108 or 112 or 116 or 120 or 124 or 128 or 132 or 136 or 140 or 144 or 148 or 152 or
than more
more more
more
more
more more
more
more
more more more
more
104 but less but less but less but less but less but less but less but less but less but less but less but less but less
than
than
than
than
than
than
than
than
than
than
than
than
than
108
112
116
120
124
128
132
136
140
144
148
152
156
increase in the cost of living and the application of a flat rate for all categories.
The later pressed for 100 per cent compensation for the lower categories
though they would raise no objection to a flat rate allowance. The committee
finally came to the conclusion that for the lowest categories of employees
the target should obviously be compensation to the extent of 100 per cent of
the increase in the cost of living and that a lower rate of compensation should
apply to higher categories but that the amount of compensation must be
based on salary scale or slabs.
BE
5.389. The Central Wage Board for the cement industry in its report
given in 1959 has provided for 100 per cent neutralisation for the lowest
categories of wage earners and linked the dearness allowance fixed by it to
the all-India working class consumer price index number with base year
1949 The Second Pay Commission in its report at page 96 has observed as
follows :
5.391. I have next to consider the question when changes should take
place in the amount of dearness allowance. If the dearness allowance is to
be increased with every rise of one point in the index figure in the series 1949
= 100, it will similarly have to be decreased on every fall of 1 point with the
result that there will be frequent changes in the total remuneration received
by workmen. It is desirable that the pay packet of workmen should not
fluctuate too often. I accordingly direct that in the case of the clerical staff,
the dearness allowance should be calculated and paid at the rate of
three per cent of the pay (i.e. basic pay provided under this award, special
allowance, if any, and officiating allowance, if any, payable under this award)
for every rise of four points above 100 in the quarterly average of the all-India
average working class consumer price index (general), base 1949 = 100, and
in the case of the subordinate staff, the dearness allowance should be
calculated and paid at the rate of four per cent of the pay (i.e. basic pay
provided under this award, special allowance, if any, and officiating allowance,
if any, payable under this award) for every rise of four points above 100 in the
quarterly average of the all-India average working class consumer price index
(general) base 1949=100. For this purpose quarter will mean the period of
three months ending on the last day of March, June, September or December.
The final index figures as published in the Indian Labour Journal should be
the index figures which should be taken for the purposes of calculation of
dearness allowance. For the purpose of calculating the dearness allowance
for any particular month, the quarterly average for the last quarter for which
final index figures are available on the 15th day of that month should be
taken. If the dearness allowance for the month of December has to be
calculated, the quarterly average for the last quarter for which final index
figures are available on the 15th of December should be taken.
AI
256
5.392 I have provided that the index figures as published in the Indian
Labour Journal should be the figures which are to be taken for the purpose of
calculation of the dearness allowance. I have to do so in the absence of any
earlier official publication of these index figures. I am informed that these
index figures are sometimes ready many days before the date of the publication
of the particular issue of the Indian Labour Journal, in which they appear. If
that be so it would be in the public interest if the all-India consumer price
index numbers are published in the Gazette of India as soon as they are
ready. In the event of the final all-India working class consumer price index
numbers being officially published before they appear in the Indian Labour
Journal, I direct that the figures so officially published should be the figures
which should be taken for the purpose of calculation of the dearness allowance
instead of such figures when they appear in the Indian Labour Journal.
5.393. It is not necessary for me to deal individually with every demand
made. Having taken into consideration all the demands made in connection
with this item of reference, I have given my award in connection therewith.
257
AI
BE
258
CHAPTER VI
6.2. The Labour Appellate Tribunal modified the directions given by the
Sastry Tribunal, in so far as the Sastry Tribunal provided a limitation on the
duration of the leave during which house rent allowance was admissible, by
laying down that the employee on leave should continue to get the house
rent allowance even after the period of four months mentioned in the Sastry
Award has expired, provided the employee satisfied the bank that he had
retained the residential accomodation and was actually paying rent for it.
Rs. 6
Rs. 9
Rs. 12
Rs. 16
AI
It further laid down that the expression Pay in this connection included
basic pay, special allowance and officiating allowance. The Sastry Tribunal
in dealing with the question of free arccomodation provided by some banks
especially to the employees of the subordinate cadre, some of whom had
been allowed to sleep on the banks premises laid down that such concessions
or amenities which were voluntarily granted by the banks should not be taken
as conferring a right on the workmen. It observed that this amenity also
served as a kind or arrangement for the safety of the premises and the property
of the banks. It provided that even where such amenities were given, the
house rent allowance also must be given as the employees must have
facilities for housing their families at the places of their employment. It however,
laid down that no house rent allowance would be admissible where residential
quarters were provided and made available by the bank. The Sastry Tribunal
further provided that the house rent allowance must be given during leave
period also, provided that the duration of leave did not exceed four months
and prior to availing himself of leave the workmen had furnished a certificate
that he continued to retain the residential accomodation occupied by him
and that where the leave taken exceeded four months, house rent allowance
might cease at the banks discretion after the period of four months was over.
259
BE
6.3. The All India Bank Employees Association has alleged that the
amount of house rent taken into consideration while computing the pay
structure was a token amount having no relation to realities, and claimed that
a compensatory House Rent and Local Allowance should be paid to the
employees working at costlier places on the following basis :
6.I. The Sastry Tribunal in dealing with the question of house rent
allowance has observed that the house rent allowance constituted really an
item to be taken into account in fixing the wage scale. It further observed that
normally it would be included in calculating the cost of living, but there were
big cities in the country where housing accommodation was scarce and
rents were normally high notwithstanding the Rent Restriction Acts which
were in, force. It felt the necessity of considering these special cases and
providing for a house rent allowance. The Sastry Tribunal laid down that house
rent allowance should be given monthly to all whole-time workmen on the
following scale :
6.4. The All India Bank Employees Federation has submitted that the
problem of housing in almost all the centres had become more acute than
what it was at the time of the Sastry Award on account of the influx of population
in commercial and industrial centres in India, that there was a substantial
increase in rent of the houses on account of shortage of accomodation, that
the house rent allowance awarded by the Sastry Tribunal was restricted only
to those places where the population was above 7 lacs and that it was the
general experience of all that even in places with population less than 7 lacs
there has been a considerable increase in the house rent. The Federation,
therefore, submitted that the employees should either be provided with suitable
free accomodation or they should be allowed house allowance as under :
For Cities with
population
Supervisory Staff
(i)
Below 5 lacs
260
Clerks
Subordinate
Staff
15/-
Rs. 10/-
Rs. 20/-
Rs. 15/-
25% of the
basic pay
25% of the
basic pay.
6.5. The All India State Bank of India Staff Federation has made a demand
in this connection which is similar to the demand made by the All India Bank
Employees Association, with this change that to the project areas and State
capitals it has added hill stations and proprietary towns having population of
less than 10 lacs.
6.6. The Vadroda Rajya Bank Nokar Sangh has submitted that
employees should be provided with suitable free accomodation and they
should be allowed allowance as mentioned below :
Subordinate Staff
BE
6.7. The Indian Overseas Bank Employees Union has demanded the
house rent allowance as under :
...
...
...
...
AI
...
While computing our basic pay the amount of house rent has not
been taken into cosideration.A compensatory house rent and local
allowance should be paid to the employees at the rate of 15 per
cent of basic pay or Rs. 20 whichever is more."
6.9. The Bihar Provincial Central Bank of India Employees Association
has stated that the banks should provide suitable free furnished quarters to
all the employees or pay house rent allowance as under:
For Cities with
population.
Supervisory Staff
(i)
Rs. 10/-
Rs. 15/-
Below 5 lacs
Clerks
Subordinate
Staff
6.11. The Indian Banks Association has submitted that the house rent
allowance at present payable under the Sastry Award as modified should be
left undisturbed. It has stated that while fixing the basic pay of an employee
house rent has always been laken into consideration as an item and has
submitted that there was no case whatever for paying compensatory house
rent or local allowance. It has stated that under the Sastry Award the banks
have been directed to pay house rent allowance during leave period also,
provided the duration of the leave did not exceed four months. A complaint is
made that no directions are given regarding the kind or nature of leave
contemplated which gave rise to difficulties. It has submitted that where an
employee was on leave without pay he should not be entitled to house rent
allowance. It is pointed out that under paragraph 489 of the Sastry Award, no
pay and allowances were admissible during the period of extraordinary leave
and it is submitted that in order to harmonise the afore said two provisions,
the Tribunal may direct that no house rent allowance would be payable to an
employee during extraordinary leave or leave without pay.
6.12. The Bombay Exchange Banks Association has pleaded that no
case existed for payment of compensatory or house rent allowance over and
above what was being paid under the Sastry Award as modified. Attention
was invited to paragraph 158 of the Sastry Award and it was stated that the
element of house rent was included in basic wages and any rise was covered
by dearness allowance. The Bombay Exchange Banks Association further
262
submitted that no principle had been adduced in support of the demand and
in any event the population basis suggested by the workmen, was wrong and
unjustified. It has submitted that the demand should be rejected,
award Area II comprises all places with a population of 1 lac and more other
than those specified as falling in Area I. The wage scales fixed for Area II
taken into account the general requirement in connection with housing
accommodation in that Area and it is not necessary to specially provide for
all these places once again by a special house rent allowance.
6.13. The State Bank of India has pleaded that under the Sastry Award,
house rent allowance was paid to workmen in larger cities and there was no
basis or justification for the demand made.
6.20. The present house rent allowance generally drawn by the members
of the subordinate staff in Bombay and Calcutta is Rs. 8 and at other places
with a population of 7 lacs and above is Rs. 6. Members of the clerical staff
whose basic pay, special allowances and officiating allowance under the
Sastry Award does not exceed Rs. 100 per month also get the same amount
by way of house rent allowance. The needs of the clerical staff in this
connection cannot be considered to be the same as the needs of the members
of the subordinate staff.
6.14. The Jaya Laxmi Bank Ltd., has pleaded that house rent allowance
should not be made compulsory in areas with a population of less than 5
lacs.
AI
BE
6.17. Generally speaking, house rent is one of the items taken into
account in the fixation of wage scales. The element of house rent laken into
account for the purpose of fixing wage scales does not take into account the
requirements in connection with housing in specially expensive places. Those
working in specially expensive places are generally intended to be
compensated by a special house rent allowance. In places like Bombay,
Calcutta and Delhi (including New Delhi) where the housing problem is acute,
house rents are very high. These three places cannot be treated on par with
other cities in the country. So far as Bombay and Calcutta are concerned,
Tribunals in the past have thought it fit to compensate the employees in
these cities with a compensatory house rent allowance. As regard the city of
Delhi (including New Delhi) in recognition of the fact that house rents were
high, Government has by an order classified Delhi as an A Class city for the
purpose of house rent and compensatory allowance for Central Government
employees.
6.15. The Gadodia Bank Ltd., has stated that the status quo should be
maintained.
6.18. The housing problem in other cities with a population over 7 lacs is
less acute than in Bombay, Calcutta and Delhi but is by and large more
acute than in other cities and towns, and needs to be provided for by the
grant of a house rent allowance. Some provision is also required to be made
for State capitals not included in the aforesaid places and places included in
Area I which are not otherwise provided for by reason of the growing demand
for housing.
6.19. A demand has been made for a special house rent allowance for
places with a population of 1 lac and over. The wage scales have been fixed
having regard to the areawise division of places in the county. Under this
263
Rs.
12
12
15
20
The expression pay for this purpose will mean basic pay and will include
special allowance and officiating allowance.
6.23. The house rent allowance payable to all members of the subordinate
staff will be Rs. 9 at Bombay, Calcutta and Delhi and will be Rs. 7 at other
264
6.24. For the purpose of house rent allowance payable to workmen the
expression Bombay will include Greater Bombay; the expression Calcutta
will include Howrah, Barrackpore, Behala, Alipore, Cossipur, Garden Reach,
Baranagore, Tallygunge, South Suburban Municipal Area and Dum Dum and
the expression Delhi will include Old and New Delhi and Delhi Shahadara.
6.25 Where employees occupy residential quarters provided by the bank
they will not be entitled to any house rent allowance.
Hill Allowance
6.29. The Sastry Tribunal has provided for hill stations or towns with a
height of 4,000 feet above sea level, 8'/3 per cent of the pay subject to a
minimum of Rs. 6 per month, and for hill stations or towns above 5,500 feet
above sea level, 12 per cent of the pay, subject to a minimum of Rs. 10 per
month, by way of hill allowance for all workmen.
AI
BE
6.26. Where an employee is on leave of any kind without pay, he will not
be entitled to draw any house rent allowance. Where an employee is on
leave other than leave of any kind without pay, he will be entitled to be paid
house rent allowance provided he satisfies the bank that he has continued to
retain the residential accommodation occupied by him. In cases where
separate residential quarters are not provided by the bank, but an employee
is allowed to sleep on the banks premises he will be entitled to receive
house rent allowance.
places with a population of over 7 lacs and other State capitals and other
places in Area I. Under the provisions contained in the Sastry Award as
modified, drivers, electricians and head messengers employed by A Class
banks in Area I were entitled in the 25th and subsequent years of their service
to receive Rs. 12 by way of house rent allowance at Bombay and Calcutta
and Rs. 9 by way of house rent allowance at other places falling within Area
I by reason of their basic pay and special allowance exceeding Rs. 100. I
direct that drivers, electricians and head messengers employed in A Class
banks in Area I will receive in the 25th and subsequent years of their services
by way of further house rent allowance Rs. 4 at Bombay, Calcutta and Delhi
and Rs. 3 at other places falling within Area I under this award.
6.28. The Sastry Tribunal has provided that the banks should under take
the responsibility of getting the uniforms of the members of the subordinate
staff washed and where it was not possible to do so it has provided for a
washing allowance at the rate of Rs. 2 per month in Area I, Rs. 1-8-0 per
month in Area II and Re. 1 per month in Area III. The All India Bank Employees
Association has claimed a sum of Rs. 3 per month by way of washing
allowance if no arrangement for washing of the uniforms is made by the
banks. The All India Bank Employees Federation has claimed that the banks
should make satisfactory arrangements for getting the uniforms of the
265
6.30. The All India Bank Employees Association has claimed for the hill
stations having a height between 3,000 to 5,500 feet, 10 per cent of pay with
a minimum of Rs. 15 per month and for hill stations having a height of 5,500
feet and over, 15 per cent of pay with a minimum of Rs. 25 per month. The All
India Bank Employees Federation has claimed, for hill stations with a height
of 3,000 feet above sea level, 10 per cent of pay with a minimum of Rs. 12 per
month and for hill stations with a height of over 3,000 feet, 15 per cent of pay
with a minimum of Rs. 24 per month. A large number of workmens
organisations have made demands similar to those of the All India Bank
Employees Association while a few unions have made demands similar to
the demands of the All India Bank Employees Federation in this respect. The
State Bank of Patiala (All Cadres) Employees Association has claimed, that
the hill allowance should be paid throughout the year and that it should be
paid even when an employee is on leave. The banks are against any change
in the hill allowance. The Bharatha Lakshmi Bank pleads for the exemption
of small banks from the payment of hill allowance.
6.31. The workmen have not only asked for a variation in the basis but
also in the quantum of the hill allowance. The reasons given for higher
allowances are (1) inadequacy of the present allowance, and (2) the high
cost of living at the hill stations where all necessities of life are imported from
outside. It is stated that at hill stations, in summer, due to the influx of
people, and in the rains, due to the communications being cut off, the prices
266
soar high.
level upto 5,500 feet above sea level at the rate of 6 per cent of the basic pay,
and of special allowance and of officiating allowance, if any, subject to a
minimum of Rs. 6 per month and a maximum of Rs. 20 per month, and for hill
stations or towns above 5,500 feet above sea level, 9 per cent of the basic
pay and of special allowance and of officiating allowance, if any, subject to a
minimum of Rs. 10 per month and a maximum of Rs. 20 per month should be
paid, to all employees who are workmen by way of fuel allowance. This
allowance will be payable for the five months of November to March of each
year.
6.32. Having considered all aspects of the matter, including the change
in the scales of pay provided under this award, I direct that for hill stations or
towns with a height of 4,000 feet above sea level, upto 5,500 feet above sea
level, 6 per cent of the basic pay and of special allowance and of officiating
allowance, if any, subject to a minimum of Rs. 6 per month and for hill stations
or towns above 5,500 feet above sea level, 9 per cent of the basic pay and of
special allowance, and of officiating allowance, if any, subject to a minimum
of Rs. 10 per month, should be paid to all employees who are workmen by
way of hill allowance.
Conveyance Allowance
Fuel Allowance
BE
6.34. The demand by most of the workers organisations is for the grant
of a fuel allowance at the same rate as the one demanded for hill allowance
for six months from October to March every year. The All India Bank
Employees Federation, however, demands payment of this allowance
throughout the year. A similar demand has also been made by some unions
such as the Bihar Provincial Central Bank of India Employees Association,
and the Central Bank of India Employees Associations at Patna, Muzaffarpur
and Amritsar which usually follow the pattern of the demands of the All India
Bank Employees Federation.
6.39. The Sastry Tribunal has directed that where an employee incurs
expenditure in the performance of banks work, he should be reimbursed to
the extent that the expenditure is fairly and legitimately incurred. The
expenditure incurred for going from the employees residence to office or vice
versa was not covered by this direction as the same was deemed to be
included in the pay scale. The employees have made a demand for conveyance
allowance. I give directions similar to those given by the Sastry Tribunal in
connection with conveyance allowance.
AI
6.36. The banks do not want the existing provision for fuel allowance to
be disturbed. The State Bank of India considers the change demanded in the
fuel allowance as unreasonable. The Bharalha Lakshmi Bank submits that
the. provision regarding fuel allowance is not applicable to it.
6.37. The demand for a higher fuel allowance is made on account of the
alleged increase in the cost and the difficulties experienced in obtaining fuel.
It is alleged that since the present fuel allowance for only five months did not
wholly cover the winter season it was demanded that the month of October
should also be added to the period. The demand for payment of fuel allowance
throughout the year is unreasonable and is rejected. No case has been made
out for any increase in the period during which this allowance should be paid.
6.38. Having taken all aspects of the matter into consideration, including
the change in the scales of pay under this award, I direct that fuel allowance
should be paid for hill station or towns with a height of 4,000 feet above sea
267
duty should not ordinarily be required to be done in more than 3 spells and
when the employees residence is not close to the place of work, seven hours
of split duty .should be treated as equal to 8 hours of normal duty.
Children Allowance
BE
6.43. Before the Sastry Tribunal a demand was made that in such cases
the workmen should be given a conveyance allowance for one trip and there
should be a reduction by one hour in the total number of working hours in
view of the double trip from home to office and back. The Sastry Tribunal did
not give any directions as demanded as it considered that it was possible
and not unlikely that there might be some compensatory advantages in such
cases. It further considered that in any event it was a matter which was
better left to the discretion of the management. Under paragraph 308 of the
Sastry Award, the banks have been given the liberty to fix at their discretion
the actual timing of work provided the provision relating to the maximum
number of hours fixed was observed.
6.42. The banks are against the grant of split duty allowance. They
submit that the management must have freedom to adjust office hours to suit
the exigencies of their business so long as they do not exceed the limit
provided by the award. The Bank of Baroda has stated that some branches of
the Bank, specially in suburbs, work in two sessions, morning and evening
for the convenience of customers in the locality but within the limits of the
total working hours prescribed by the Sastry Award.
AI
6.44. The working hours in banks are below the maximum prescribed
under many Shops and Establishments Acts. Owing to climatic reasons or
the convenience of the customers some banks may keep some of their
establishments open only in the mornings and evenings. It is not necessary
to provide any general split duty allowance. In case of any genuine hardship
the matter is best left to the discretion of the bank concerned.
6.46. The All India Bank Employees Federation, the State Bank of India
Employees Association, Bengal Circle, the State Bank of India Employees
Association, Delhi Circle, the Bihar Provincial Central Bank of India Employees
Association, the Central Bank of India Association, at Patna, Muzaffarpur
and Amritsar, the Indian Overseas Bank Employees Union, Madras and the
Allahabad Bank Employees Union, Calcutta, have claimed a children
allowance of Rs. 10 per child with a maximum of Rs. 30. The State Bank of
India Employees Association, Bengal Circle and the State Bank of India
Employees Association, Delhi Circle have claimed this allowance as children
and education allowance. The Vadodra Rajya Bank Nokar Sangh has
demanded a children allowance of Rs. 10 per child without fixing a maximum.
The State Bank of Patiala (All Cadres) Employees Association has demanded
a children allowance of Rs. 10 per child with a minimum of Rs. 30 per month.
It has been argued that this allowance is a kind of childrens education
allowance.
6.47. The banks are opposed to the demand for children allowance. It is
pleaded that the workmen are on incremental scales which take care of an
increase in the family.
6.48. The All India Bank Employees Association which had claimed
before the Sastry Tribunal a children allowance of Rs. 10 per month for every
dependent child with a maximum of Rs. 30, has made no such claim before
this Tribunal. While considering this demand of the All India Bank Employees
Association the Sastry Tribunal had observed as follows :
270
be given and I am unable to provide any bad climate allowance. The demand
is thereore not granted.
It is true that the Reserve Bank pays this allowance to its employees
under certain conditions, but that is only one isolated example. The grant of
this allowance will impose a considerable burden on banks. I see no necessity
of saddling banks with this additional burden. The claim of the employees for
children allowance is disallowed.
Officiating Allowance
6.52. The Sastry Tribunal has in this connection provided as follows :
6.53. The Labour Appellate Tribunal modified this provision and gave the
following directions :
(1) Where the basic pay of the permanent incumbent exceeds the
basic pay of the person officiating, the officiating allowance shall
be 20 per cent of the basic pay or the difference between the two
basic pays, whichever is less, provided that in no case will the
officiating pay be less than 10 per cent of the basic pay of the
person officiating. (2) Where the basic pay of the permanent
incumbent is equal to or less than that of the person officiating, the
officiating pay shall be 10 per cent of the basic pay of the person
officiating.
BE
6.49. The All India Bank Employees Federation and some other unions
have claimed a local allowance of Re. 1 per day on local transfer temporarily
or otherwise from one office to another. The Cochin Commercial Bank
Employees Association has claimed a transfer allowance (local offices only)
of Rs. 2 per day for supervisory staff, Re. 1 per day for clerical staff and 50 nP.
per day for subordinate staff. The All India Bank of Baroda Employees
Federation, by a supplementary statement, has also made a demand under
the heading conveyance allowance stating that when an employee is
transferred from One branch to another situated in the same city but at a
considerable distance from the original branch, he should be reimbursed by
the bank to the extent he is subjected to additional expenses on account of
such transfer. The banks have submitted that this demand is unjustified. No
case has been made out for the grant of this allowance and the same is
disallowed.
Local Allowance
271
272
AI
6.51. There are various places in the country where bad climate allowance
is being paid to State Government employees. No evidence has been led
about the climatic conditions of Vyara and the extent of the relief required to
Federation claims 15 per cent of the pay of the person officiating as allowance
for the period he officiates. The State Bank of Patiala (All Cadres) Employees
Association demands payment of officiating allowance at the rate of 15 per
cent of the pay to an employee for the period he officiates in the higher post.
Rs.
Rs.
10/- flat.
15/- flat.
25/-flat.
15/- flat.
20/- flat.
50/- flat.
20/- flat.
25/- flat.
100/- flat.
6.58. There is a demand made for an allowance of Rs. 20 per month for
pass book writers by the Cochin Commercial Bank Employees Association.
There is no justification for the demand and the same is rejected.
Supplementary Callers
6.59. There is a demand made for an allowance of Rs. 10 per month for
supplementary callers. No case is made out for the grant of any such allowance
and the claim in connection with the same is rejected.
BE
6.55. The banks in general are in favour of the retention of the existing
provisions on the subject of officiating allowance. The Bombay Exchange
Banks Association has stated that no officiating allowance should be payable
to an employee doing the work of another in the same grade. It has however
submitted that if the permanent incumbent of a particular post was drawing a
special allowance his locum tenens who was in a same grade should receive,
provided he works there for atleast 15 consecutive days either the difference
between the higher special allowance of the permanent incumbent and his
own special allowance if he was in receipt of one, or the same special
allowance as drawn by the permanent incumbent and no other allowance
should be paid to the locum tenens. The State Bank of India has opposed
the demand for a fixed quantum of officiating allowance. The Travancore Cochin
Bankers Association has complained that the present rules governing the
officiating allowance have created several anomalies in the sense, that if a
clerk getting a basic pay of Rs. 150 takes leave and a new clerk undertakes
his work ,the banks are compelled to pay officiating allowance. It is pleaded
that the officiating allowance should be made applicable only when (i)
subordinate officiate in place of clerks or (ii) clerks officiate in place of officers.
The Association has however stated that the present method of payment
may be continued.
AI
6.56. After considering the demands of the workmen and all the
circumstances of the case including the changes made in the pay scales
under this award, I direct that where a workman officiates in a post carrying a
salary higher than his own for a period exceeding 15 days, he should be paid
an allowance for the period during which he officiates on the basis following
:
(1)
(2)
6.57. Besides the house rent allowance, the Indian Overseas Bank Employees
Union, Madras, has demanded a city compensatory allowance at the following
rates :
6.61. The Indian Overseas Bank, in reply, has stated that the Hindi
language allowance was granted in May 1949 as an incentive for the South
Indian members of the staff working in Bombay and Calcutta to acquire
knowledge of that language which was even then gaining importance in the
North India centres. This allowance was granted at the rate of Rs. 15 per
mensem for clerical staff and at the rate of Rs. 25 per mensem for supervisory
273
274
AI
6.63. With regard to the Hindi allowance and good conduct allowance,
Shri Sowani, in rejoinder has stated that these allowances should be continued
in cases of employees who are actually receiving them or else they may be
merged in their basic pay. No case has been made out for the grant of any of
the reliefs claimed by the workmen. The continuation of these allowances
rests entirely with the management and I give no direction in connection
therewith.
One and a half second class fares by rail or steamer for himself
and further second class fares for his family, if taken.
(2)
(3)
BE
6.62. The bank has also made a reference to a key allowance and has
stated that under the provisions of the Sastry Award members of the cash
department staff were not eligible for any special allowance if the requisite
number of clerks was not working under them; but this point was raised by
the Indian Overseas Bank Employees Union before the Regional Labour
Commissioner at Madras and as a gesture of goodwill, the bank agreed to
pay a key allowance of Rs. 15 to the cash department staff who are in joint
custody of cash at the various centres. The Bank has pleaded that when the
scales of salary and special allowances that may be granted by this Tribunal
come into force, these allowances would have to be withdrawn even from
those who are now drawing such allowances, that the bank should be at
liberty to do this as there was no statutory obligation on the bank to continue
the same, that the present recipients of these allowances could not claim
the salary and allowances that may be granted by this Tribunal and at the
same time insist on payment of these allowances and if the employees so
choose, they may be given the choice to opt in toto for the privileges and
benefits they are now enjoying and should not be allowed to get the better of
the two sets of scales of pay and allowances.
keys. It is submitted that such allowance is not a special allowance and that
shroffs attending to cash duties must also hold the joint custody of safe keys
and that this allowance should be dropped. I give no directions regarding the
grant or stoppage of this allowance. The matter is left entirely to the discretion
of the management to take such decision in connection therewith as it deems
fit.
(4)
Unmarried
20
15
15
12
One and a half third class fares by rail or steamer for himself and
further third class fares for his family, if taken.
(2) The cost actually incurred in transferring his personal property upto
a miximum of ten Bengal maunds at goods rates in the case of a
married employee and five Bengal maunds in other cases.
(3)
6.64. By its written statement, the Andhra Bank has stated that it is at
present allowing a key allowance to shroffs holding joint custody of safe
275
276
thirty days.
NOTES :
(3)
(4)
(1)
(2)
When, for any reason, the family of an employee does not travel
with him but joins with him within a period of six months from the
date of his transfer, an employee shall be entitled to draw the further
fares and the cost of transporting luggage payable for the family,
subject to the limits fixed in the preceeding paragraphs.
(3)
(5)
Employees on Tour
In the case of journeys by rail or steamer other than on transfer, where
an employee has to travel for inspection or other duty in the interests of the
bank an employee who is not a member of the subordinate staff shall be paid
his travelling expenses on the following basis :
(1)
One second class fare to and fro for himself by rail or steamer.
(2)
One third class fare by rail or steamer to and fro for his servant, if
taken, where the period of stay away from headquaters exceeds
277
(1)
BE
AI
(4)
General
(2)
(3)
The claim for journeys can ordinarily be only for the shortest route
The All India Bank Employees Association has claimed that an
employee on transfer or on tour on official duty or on deputation
outside the permanent station should be paid travelling allowance
at the following rate :
(a)
(b)
All categories of employees should get road mileage at 12 nP. per mile
for routes not connected by rail or steamer. All categories of employees
should be paid actual expenses incurred on luggage, conveyance, cooly
hire, packing, crating, etc., in course of journey. In addition to the above a
member of the clerical or supervisory staff should be paid a Second class
fare by rail or steamer for his servant if taken.
6.66. The All India Bank Employees Federation has claimed that travelling
allowance should be awarded as follows :
Supervisory
Staff
278
Clerks
Subordinate
Staff
(i)
claimed it, but it has added that travelling allowance to subordinate staff
should also be paid while he is on deputation outside his permanent station.
1 1st Class
1 1st Class
1 2nd Class
3rd Class
3rd Class
Nil
6.69. The banks generally submit that the existing provisions should
continue and oppose the demands made by the employees in excess thereof.
The Northern India Banks Association has submitted that when two stations
are not connected by rail or sea but are connected by road and there is a bus
arrangement the actual bus fare should be paid to the employees travelling
on banks business. The Travancore Cochin Bankers Association has taken
objection to the demand for 12 nP. per mile for routes not connected by rail or
steamer as it contends that bus fares are generally much less. The Bharatha
Lakshmi Bank submits that only third class fares should be allowed to its
clerks and peons. The Jaya Lakshmi Bank submits that the family of workmen
to be provided in connection with the travelling allowance should be employee,
his wife and two children. The Miraj State Bank states that it has adequate
rules governing travelling allowance which have given rise to no disputes in
the past.
6.67. The other workmens organisations have made more or less similar
demands. Some of them have followed the pattern of demands of the All India
Bank Employees Association and some the All India Bank Employees
Federation.
6.70. At the time when the Sastry Tribunal gave its award, a passenger
travelling by train could generally travel, apart from the air-conditioned class,
by first class, second class, inter class and third class. A passenger travelling
by second class when he travelled at night, was entitled to sleeping
accomodation and to have a full berth reserved for the night journey. At present
a person can travel generally, apart from the air-conditioned class, by first
class, second class and third class. A person, at present travelling by second
class, is only entitled to a seat for the journey during the night and is not
entitled to sleeping accomodation or to have a berth reserved for himself for
the night journey. It is desirable that members of the clerical staff when they
travel by train should have sleeping accomodation at night. It is therefore
necessary to modify the provisions of the Sastry Award, and I do so by
providing that whenever a workman, who is not a member of the subordinate
staff, is transferred from one station to another or has to travel for inspection
or other duty in the interests of the bank and in the course of such journey,
has to travel by train by night, he shall be paid, in addition to what is provided
under the Sastry Award as modified, reproduced above, a further amount
equivalent to the difference between one second class fare by train and one
first class fare by train for the full journey for himself provided he has travelled
throughout the journey in the first class. When he is transferred from one
station to another and is entitled to claim travelling allowance for his family
and the family has to travel by night he will be entitled to be paid the difference
between the second class fare and first class fare for the members of his
family also provided they have actually travelled in the first class. The
expression travel by night for the purpose of this provision will include journey
for a period of six or more hours between the hours of 7-00 p.m. on one day
and 7-00 a.m. on the next day.
AI
BE
6.68. The All India State Bank of India Staff Federation and the State
Bank of India State Union, Andhra Pradesh, have not demanded travelling
and halting allowance for supervisory staff and while the former has demanded
road mileage at 12 nP. per mile subject to minimum of 37 nP. for routes not
connected by rail or steamer the latter has claimed road mileage at 20 nP.
per mile subject to minimum of 37 nP. for routes not connected by rail or
steamer. The State Bank of India Employees Association (Bengal circle),
and the State Bank of India Employees Association (Delhi Circle), have
demanded actual expenses for routes not connected by rail or steamer: The
State Bank of India Employees Association (Bengal Circle) has demanded
the actual cost incurred in transferring personal effects and luggage upto a
maximum of 20 Bengal maunds for clerical staff and without any limit for the
subordinate staff. The State Bank of India Employees Association (Delhi
Circle) has demanded the actual cost incurred in transferring personal effects
and luggage upto a maximum of 25 maunds for clerical staff and of 20 maunds
for married and of 15 maunds for unmarried members of the subordinate staff.
The Vadodra Rajya Bank Nokar Sangh has claimed travelling allowance for
the employee and his family whenever he proceeds on privilege leave. The
State Bank of Patiala (All Cadres) Employees Association has claimed road
mileage at the rate of 13 nP. per mile and the payment of actual cost in
transferring personal effects with the limits following :
Category of Employee
Married
Unmarried
30 Bengal maunds
15 Bengal maunds
Subordinate
20 Bengal maunds
15 Bengal maunds
is no second class provided, an employee and his family who are ordinarily
entitled to travel by second class would be entitled to travel by first class and
would be entitled to claim the first class fare for such travel.
Halting Allowance
6.77. The Sastry Tribunal accepted the definition of the expression halting
allowance given in the Reserve Bank of India Staff Regulations, namely, as
a payment made to an employee in addition to other emoluments for any
day during which an employee is absent from headquarters on duty and is
inteded to cover the ordinary daily expenses incurred by him in consequence
of such absence. The Sastry Tribunal gave the following directions in respect
of halting allowance for each day :
AI
II
Rs. As. P.
Subordinate staff
III
Rs. As. P.
Rs. As. P.
BE
6.73. The Sastry Tribunal has provided that a member of the subordinate
staff when travelling on tansfer shall be paid the cost actually incurred in
transferring his personal property upto a maximum of 10 Bengal maunds at
goods rate in the case of a married employee and 5 Bengal maunds in other
cases. I modify the aforesaid provisions by providing 380 kilograms or 3.80
Quintals in place of 10 Bengal maunds in the case of a married employee
and 190 Kilograms or 1.9 Quintals in place of 5 Bengal maunds in other
cases.
II
Rs. As. P.
Subordinate staff
III
Rs. As. P.
Rs. As. P.
12 0
12 0
Under Rs 100 - -
For the purpose of halting allowance a day shall mean each period
of 24 hours or any part thereof reckoned from the time the employee
leaves his headquarters, provided the duration of absence from
headquarters covers at least one night.
(3)
(4)
...
...
Clerk
...
...
...
Supervisor
...
...
...
BE
It has further claimed that halting allowance should be paid to all employees
who are deputed out-stations on temporary transfer, that half days halting
allowance should be admissible when the journey is completed on the same
day and that if the stay outside the headquarters exceeds twenty-four hours,
a day should mean each period of twenty-four hours or any part thereof.
6.79. The All India Bank Employees Federation has claimed halting
allowance at the rates following :
Halting allowance in
Supervisory
Staff
Clerks
Subordinate
Staff
AI
6.80. The All India State Bank of India Staff Federation has claimed
halting allowance when an employee is required to be absent from
headquarters on duty. For subordinate staff it has claimed a halting allowance
for cities with population of less than 10 lakhs at the rate of Rs. 6 per diem
and at Rs. 8 per diem for cities with population of 10 lakhs and above. For
clerical staff halting allowance at the rate of Rs. 10 per diem for cities with
population of less than 10 lakhs and at the rate of Rs. 12 per diem for cities
with population of 10 lakhs and above has been claimed. It has also claimed
that halting allowance should be paid to all employees who are deputed to
out stations on temporary transfers, that half days halting allowance should
be admissible when journey is completed on the same day and that if the
stay outside headquarters exceeds twenty-four hours a day should mean
each period of twenty-four hours or any part thereof.
6.81. The Vadodra Rajya Bank Nokar Sangh has claimed that by way of
283
6.78. The All India Bank Employees Association has claimed halting
allowance for all employees who are required to be absent from headquarters
on duty at the rates following;
Subordinate staff
...
284
00
II
IIII
Rs. nP.
2
50
Rs. nP.
2
00
00
00
00
...
00
00
00
00
00
00
...
the industry. The Sastry Tribunal has observed that the employees are
generally recruited from and work in their home towns or at places not very
far off and that the demand had not found favour in any adjudication known to
the Sastry Tribunal.
6.88. The All India Bank Employees Association has claimed that an
employee while proceeding on leave for not less than thirty days at a time
should be paid railway fare for self and family to and fro from his native place
or to any other place of change upto 1,000 miles once in three years.
(3)
(4)
6.89. The All India Bank Employees Federation has claimed that when
an employee proceeds on leave he should be granted leave fare concession
for himself and his family to meet the cost of travelling etc. at the rate following
:(i)
AI
6.85. The All India Bank Employees Association has demanded that an
employee on transfer or on deputation outside his permanent station shall
have at least 10 days joining time, excluding the actual period involved in the
journey and that the joining time should not count as a part of the earned
leave of the employee same is the demand of the All India State Bank of India
Staff Federation and the State Bank of India Staff Union, Andhra Pradesh,
Vijayawada. The State Bank of India Employees Association (Bengal Circle)
and the State Bank of India Employees Association (Delhi Circle), have
demanded a grant of at least one weeks leave as joining time.
6.86. The question of joining time is not covered by the item of reference
under consideration which relates to house rent and other allowances including
travelling and halting allowances and leave fare concessions. The question of
transfer and the matters incidental to it have not been referred to me and I
give no direction in connection with the same.
(v) Leave Fare Concessions
6.87. The Sastry Tribunal in paragraph 474 of its award has turned down
the demand for leave fare concession on the ground that extra burden of such
leave fare concession should not be cast on the banks at the then stage of
285
(ii)
Fare by rail, road or sea upto a distance of 1,000 miles once in two
years for the employee and his family.
The stipulated mileage to be waived in the case of those who have
to travel to their native places.
6.90. The All India State Bank of India Staff Federation, the State Bank
of India Staff Union, Andhra Pradesh, Vijayawada, the All India Bank of Baroda
Employees Federation, and the Employees Association of the Union Bank
of Bijapur and Sholapur, have claimed the same leave fare concession as the
All India Bank Employees Association, The Bihar Provincial Central Bank of
India Employees Association. The Central Bank of India Employees
Association, Patna, Muzaffarpur, and Amritsar and the Vadodra Rajya Bank
Nokar Sangh have made a demand in respect of leave fare concessions
similar to that of the All India Bank Employees Federation. The Indian
Overseas Bank Employees Union, Madras has demanded first class fare by
rail, road or sea upto a distance of 900 miles once in a year for the employee
and his family and has submitted that the stipulation of mileage should be
waived when he is going to native place. The State Bank of India Employees
Associations (Bengal Circle), and the State Bank of India Employees
Association (Delhi Circle), have demanded that while an employee proceeds
on leave he should be paid railway fares for self and his family to and from his
native place or to any other place of change upto 900 miles once in two
years.
BE
(2)
expressed its willingness before the Labour Appellate Tribunal to extend the
same to the workmen.
6.94. One of the grounds on which the Sastry Tribunal turned down this
demand was the extra burden which the granting of the demand would have
imposed on banks at the then stage of the industry. That ground, in my view,
is not available to A Class banks. They are well able to bear the burden of
such concession. I direct that A Class banks should give to the workmen
employed by them leave fare concession once in every three years when
they go on leave for not less than thirty days as follows :
(2)
(3)
The class of fare to which the workmen and the members of his
family would be entitled would be the same to which the workman
is entitled while he travels on duty.
AI
6.92. The Sen Tribunal, while it did not give any directions in this
connection, had recommended in paragraph 333 of its award the adoption of
a rule by at least the bigger banks under which facilities of the kind suggested
by the Central Pay Commission even if some what restricted (e.g. payment
of half the expenses in question or once in two years) may be available to at
least such of their employees, as have their homes at a considerable distance
from the place where they have to serve their employers.
(1)
BE
concession. The Bombay Exchange Banks Association has stated that even
in cases where the home towns of bank employees are situated at a
considerable distance from their places of work they have nevertheless
normally been recruited at these offices on their own applications which implied
that they themselves had chosen to settle down in those places. The Northern
India Banks Association submits that the demand of the employees for leave
fare concessions will cause a heavy burden unnecessarily on the banks of
the class represented by it. The National Bank of Lahore submits that "the
employee who cares to avail of his leave at a distant place should be able to
save from his own earnings and that the bank should not be burdened with
leave fare concession which even the officers of the bank were not getting.
The Travancore-Cochin Bankers Association has stated that the employees
are almost local people and that there is no necessity for them to travel 1,000
miles as per their claim. The Bharatha Lakshmi Bank pleads that leave fare
concession should not be made applicable to banks. The Miraj State Bank
has stated that the question of granting leave fare concession to employees
did not arise in the case of that bank as the workmen employed in the bank
do not travel any considerable distance for the purpose of availing themselves
of their leave and that the bank could not also afford the luxury of granting
any leave fare to its workmen.
288
CHAPTER VII
(7)
(9)
(10)
AI
BE
7.2. The .Sastry Tribunal took the view that the provisions relating to
provident fund have to be taken into consideration in fixing the wage structure
and directed that the banks should have provident fund schemes on the lines
indicated below :
(1) The provident fund should obtain recognition under the Indian Incometax Act 1922 and for this purpose the rules under the provident fund
should not be contrary to any rules laid down under the Indian
Income-tax Act. Where a bank for reasons of its own does not
choose to get the provident fund recognised under the provisions of
the Indian Income-tax Act the burden of the income-tax to the extent
to which the employees would not have to bear if the fund were a
recognised fund must be borne by the banks and not passed on to
the employees.
(2) All whole-time employees of the bank other than personal or
domestic servants, if any, should be allowed the benefit of the fund
as and from the date of confirmation in service.
(3) There should be no minimum amount of salary or remuneration
fixed for any employee to become eligible to join the provident
fund.
(4) Every eligible employee shall be required to subscribe to the fund
on accordance with the rules.
(5) The rules should provide for every subscriber to the fund nominating
a person or persons either belonging to the subscribers family or
dependant on him to receive the amount that may stand to the
credit of his fund in the event of his death occuring before the amount
has become payable.
(6) Each subscriber shall be given a pass book in which shall be
entered the amounts to his credit, made up of his contribution and
the banks contribution and the interest earned on the total moneys
in his account. The advances taken, if any, and the repayments
made should also be entered therein. The subscription due from
(8)
289
(11)
(12)
(13)
(14)
(15)
290
had not enjoyed the benefit of a provident fund or who had not been allowed to
join an existing provident fund after confirmation.
7.4. The Sastry Tribunal left it to the banks concerned to devise a proper
machinery either by convention or by rules so as to provide for the
representation of workmen to the extent of th of the total strength of the
Board of Trustees.
7.5. As regards the provident fund in the Imperial Bank of India which
was governed by the provisions of the Provident Fund Act, XIX of 1925, the
Sastry Tribunal directed the alteration of the rules of its provident fund to
provide for a contribution at the rate of 8-1/3 per cent, as in the case of the
major Indian Banks. It also directed that in case there was any difficulty in
carrying out the alteration in the rules until the rules were so altered a special
monthly allowance called provident fund excess contribution allowance
should be given to the workmen to cover the difference between the then
existing rate of five per cent and the rate of 8-1/3 per cent, fixed by the
Tribunal.
AI
BE
7.6. As regards the Exchange Banks which were before the Sastry
Tribunal, it laid down that in their case also the minimum rate of contribution
should be 8-1/3 per cent, and that the Exchange Banks which were having
higher rates of contribution were not to reduce them. In case of the Exchange
Banks wherein the rate of contribution was less than 8-1/3 per cent, the
Tribunal directed that the workmen should be paid a special provident fund
excess contribution allowance made up of the difference between the existing
rate and the rate fixed under its award wherever the existing rate was less. In
view of the difficulties that might be experienced, the Exchange Banks were
exempted from the relevant provisions in the general scheme laid down by it
for the representation of the workmen.
291
7.7. The Labour Appellate Tribunal, in dealing with the demand that bank
employees with a period of service of less than five years should not be
deprived of the banks contribution, stated that it did not see how it could
alter the directions of the Sastry Tribunal on the point as the same did not
involve any question of law. It, however, observed that the same was unfortunate
as the directions given did have certain undesirable features and expressed
the view that its refusal to interfere with the directions of the Sastry Tribunal
must not be understood to be an approval of the directions on the merits.
7.8. In connection with the directions given by the Sastry Tribunal that
wherever the Exchange Banks were making a contribution to the provident
fund in excess of that prescribed by the Sastry Tribunal, they should continue
to do so, the Labour Appellate Tribunal altered the directions as regards the
Hong kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation which under its rules had
provided for contribution at the rate of 20 per cent of the basic pay as against
5 per cent contribution by the workmen. The Labour Appellate Tribunal applied
the general scheme of provident fund as given by the Sastry Award to this
292
bank.The National City Bank of New York which was contributing 10 per cent
of basic pay as provident fund as against the employees contribution of 5 per
cent had not appealed against the decision of the Sastry Tribunal and hence
the Labour Appellate Tribunal did not feel itself called upon to vary the award
as regards that bank.
workmen.
7.12. The All India Bank Employees Federation has demanded that
contribution by both the banks and the employees should be at the rate of 12
per cent of the total emoluments, that lapsed and/or unclaimed fund
should be distributed pro-rata amongst the members of the fund every year,
that there should be equal representations of workmen in the Board of
Trustees, that benefits of the fund should be allowed to all the employees
including part-time permanent employees, that full provident fund should be
paid after five years of service and that in case of death or resignation as a
result of illness or disability, full provident fund should be paid even before five
years of service.
AI
BE
7.10. The Labour Appellate Tribunal rejected the demand of the workmen
that they should have at least one-half representation on the Board of Trustees,
observing that the provident funds of the banks were not confined to workmen
alone, that officers of the banks were also permitted to be members of the
fund, that prima facie, it was fair that officers should have equal representation
with the workmen and that the banks as parties making contributions equal
to those made by the workmen and officers together should have
representation to the same extent as officers and workmen combined. In
connection with the choosing of the representatives of the workmen, it observed
that the banks should, however, be able to devise a method by which someone
stationed at that place where the accounts of the fund were maintained) and
likely to command confidence of workmen members of the fund can be
appointed as their trustee-representative.
7.13. The All India State Bank of India Staff Federation has claimed that
all permanent employees including part-time employees should be made
members of the provident fund scheme, that the rate of contribution should
be ten per cent of pay and the bank should contribute an equal amount every
month, that interest at the rate of five per cent per annum with six monthly
rests on the total contribution by the employees and the bank should be
allowed, that unclaimed amounts in the fund should be distributed pro-rata
every three years amongst the existing members of the fund, that full benefits
of the fund should be permitted to an employee on completion of one years
service, that on Ihe Board of Provident Fund Trust, the workmen and employers
should have equal number of representatives, that workmens representatives
should be elected by themselves by simple majority of votes, that re-election
of the workmens representatives should be held after every three years unless
necessitated earlier by death or resignation or recall by a majority of workmen.
7.11. The All India Bank Employees Association submitted that all
permanent employees including the part-time employees should be made
members of the provident fund that the rate of contribution by the employees
should be 9-3/8 per cent of the total monthly emoluments made up of basic
pay, dearness allowance, special allowance, and officiating allowance, if any,
that the bank should contribute an equal amount every month that interest at
the rate of 6 per cent per annum with six monthly rests should be paid on the
total contribution by the employee and the bank, that unclaimed amounts in
the fund should be distributed pro-rata every three years amongst the existing
members of the fund and that full benefits of the fund should be permitted to
an employee on completion of one years service. It also claims that on the
Board of Provident Fund Trust, the workmen and employers should have
equal number of representatives, that workmens representatives should be
elected by themselves by simple majority of votes and that re-election of the
workmens representatives should be held after every three years unless
necessitated earlier by death or resignation or re-call by a majority of the
293
7.14. The Vadodra Rajya Bank Nokar Sangh has claimed lhat the rate of
contribution should not be less than 10 per cent of total emoluments of the
employee i.e. basic pay, dearness allowance and special allowance and that
like amount should be contributed by Ihe bank, and that interest on the same
should be paid at the rate of five per cent, that an employee should be entitled
to full amount contributed including the banks contribution after five years of
service, that in the case of resignation or retirement an employee should be
entitled to the full amount of contribution including the banks contribution
after five years of service, that in the case of termination of service of an
employee by the bank or on retrenchment or on death or mental or physical
disability of an employee to continue further in service he should be entitled
to full contribution of the bank, irrespective of the length of service, that fifty
per cent of the Trustees of the provident fund Trust should be elected by the
employees and that part-time employees also should be made members of
the provident fund and that a certified copy of the Provident Fund Rules and
the yearly balance-sheet of the Fund should be given to each member of the
fund by the bank.
7.15. The State Bank of India Staff Union, Andhra Pradesh, and the All
294
BE
7.17. The Indian Banks Association, while opposing the demands of the
workmen, has submitted that the Tribunal should lay down that the
representative of workmen, once appointed, should hold office for at least a
period of five years unless he vacated the same by reason of the rules of the
provident fund or on his transfer from the place where the fund was being
administered to another branch of the bank or on his being promoted from
clerical grade to an officers grade.It is claimed that liberty should be given to
the banks to give to the employees either Pass Books or Statements of
Account in respect of their provident fund account. It is submitted that when
an employee, instead of being dismissed, was discharged or allowed to resign
by the management in order that no stigma might attach to him a provision
should be made that the employers contribution to the provident fund would
be liable to forfeiture provided such termination was the result of misconduct
causing financial loss to the employer. It is contended that the demands
regarding distribution of unclaimed amount and about representation on the
Board of Trustees were outside the jurisdiction of the Tribunal as they did not
constitute industrial disputes within the meaning of the Industrial Disputes
Act.
the provident fund should be reduced, that in order to avoid discrimination the
banks which are at present making a higher contribution than that prescribed
for other banks should be permitted to alter their rate of contribution so as to
conform to the general practice. As regards the demand for fixed interest on
the total amount of contributions, it has submitted that it is not within the
powers of the bank to determine the interest earned on the investments of
the provident fund, as a recognised provident fund such as the banks is
required by statute to be invested in specific securities and the Board of
Trustees in whom the fund is vested as required under the Indian Income-tax
Act, is the only competent authority to determine the rate of interest on the
basis of the yields of the various securities. As regards the distribution of
unclaimed amounts it is stated that the same were credited to the lapse and
forfeiture fund, that the disposal of money in the fund was governed by the
relevant rules of the provident fund concerned and that the previous permission
of the Commissioner of Income Tax would be necessary for making any
alteration therein. It is further submitted that the demands in respect of interest
and the distribution of unclaimed amounts and the representation on the
Board of Trustees did not constitute industrial disputes within the meaning of
section 2(k) of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947. It has demanded that
paragraph 368(17) of the Sastry Award should be amended so as to read as
under :
India Bank of Baroda Employees Federation have made the same demands
as the All India Banks Employees Association. Other Unions of the Bank
employees have also made demands which are more or less similar to the
demands of the All India Bank Employees Association with some difference
in the rate of contribution and the rate of interest and the length of service
after which full amount of the provident fund should become payable. The
State Bank of Patiala (All Cadres) Employees Association wants that all the
permanent and temporary (whole-time workers) should be members of the
provident fund.
295
296
AI
7.19. The State Bank of India points out that in so far as the provident
fund is concerned, there are two sets of employees: (1) those who had been
in employment of its predecessors, the Imperial Bank of India, and (2) those
who had been employed on and after the State Bank of India came into
being, that as regards the first class of employees provision is made for their
provident fund, pension and other superannuation benefits by section 7(2)
read with section 50 of the State Bank of India Act, 1955, that in so far as the
second class of employees is concerned the provisions of section 33 read
with section 50 of the said Act apply and that in view of these statutory
provisions, any rules to be framed or any regulations to be introduced were
required to have the previous sanction of the Central Government. It has
submitted that the State Bank has no power and should not be asked to
make any alterations in the conditions, regulations, rules or quantum of any
benefits in either the provident fund of the Imperial Bank of India or in that of
the State Bank of India. It has further submitted that the Tribunal had no
jurisdiction in any way to revise the terms, conditions, rules and regulations
of either of the said provident funds or to direct introduction of any other
superannuation or pension benefits. It has further submitted that the demands
made (i) about rate of interest, (ii) about the distribution of unclaimed fund
and the amount in the Provident Fund Forfeiture Account pro-rata amongst
the existing employees, (iii) about full benefits of the fund being given on
completion of 5 years of service and (iv) about an equal number of employees
representatives being on the Board of Trustees, were not industrial disputes
under the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947. It has pleaded that under section 8
of the State Bank of India Act, it is the Central Government which has to
specify the Trustees and the Tribunal has no jurisdiction to do so. It has
opposed the demands made by the employees of the State Bank.
7.20 The Indian Banks Association on behalf of the Subsidiaries of the
State Bank of India has also made submissions similar to those of the State
Bank of India mentioned above after giving reference to the sections 11 (2),
and 63(2) (o) of the State Bank of India (Subsidiary Banks) Act, 1959.
BE
7.21. It has pleaded that the right to substitute or appoint trustees has
been conferred by enactment on the State Bank of India and that it would
amount to re-writing the Act if directions are given on this point. It has further
pleaded that the demands in respect of interest, distribution of unclaimed
amounts and the representation on the Board of Trustees could not be regarded
as industrial disputes within the meaning of section 2(k) of the Industrial
Disputes Act, 1947.
AI
7.22. On behalf of the State Bank of Patiala, it is stated that the employees
of the bank who were given in 1958 revised grades by the bank, enjoyed the
benefit of ten per cent contribution towards the provident fund based on basic
pay plus dearness pay which was fifty per cent of the dearness allowance,
that such employees were also entitled to interest at the rate of five per cent
per annum with half-yearly rests and were entitled to the benefit of insurance
rebate. It has adopted the other contentions raised by the Indian Banks
Association on behalf of its member banks.
7.23. The Northern India Banks Association opposes the demands of
the employees and says that its member banks are already contributing 8-1/
3 per cent of the workmens salary towards the provident fund as against 6
per cent under the Sastry Award. The Miraj State Bank has submitted that
its present scheme of provident fund provides for contribution of 8-1/3 per
cent of the basic pay and that as the fund is vested in Trustees who are not
parties to the present Reference, this Tribunal has no jurisdiction to entertain
the demand about provident fund in the Miraj State Bank.
7.24. Under the provisions of the Sastry Award as modified, the rate of
subscription to the provident fund by workmen is 8-1/3 per cent of the monthly
pay in the case of employees of A and B classes of banks, and 6 per cent
of the monthly pay in the case of employees of C and D classes of banks,
the expression pay being defined to mean basic pay, special allowance and
officiating allowance, if any. The banks have to make a contribution of an
equal amount.Under this award, the scheme relating to wage scales and
dearness allowance has undergone considerable change owing to the merger
297
BE
7.31. In connection with the demand that part time employees should
be allowed the benefit of provident fund, there is not much material placed
before me regarding the hours of work and the conditions of service of such
part-time employees. It was contended that part-time employees take up
service in order to supplement their main source of income. There is no
evidence before me as regards the degree of their attachment to the banks
concerned. In the present state of the regard, it is not possible for me to
make any provision relating to provident fund in connection with part-time
employees.
7.35. The Indian Banks Association has made a request for a direction
laying down that a representative of workmen once appointed, shall hold
office for at least a period of five years unless he vacates the same by reason
of the rules of the provident fund or on his transfer from the place where the
fund was being administered to another branch to the bank, or on his being
promoted from the clerical grade to the officers grade. On behalf of workmen,
a claim has been made that workmens representatives should be elected by
the workmen by a simple majority of votes and that the re-election of the
workers representative should be held after every three years unless
necessitated earlier by death or resignation or by recall by a majority of
workmen.Whilst providing that the workmens representation on the Board of
Trustees should be to the extent of one-fourth of the total strength of the
Board, the Sastry Tribunal did not lay down any procedure by which workmens
represenative could be taken on the Board of Trustees.The Labour Appellate
Tribunal noted the absence of this provision and left it to the banks to devise
a method by which some persons stationed at the place where the accounts
of the fund were kept and who were likely to command the confidence of the
workmen, could be appointed trustees. A question has been raised whether
any dispute in connection with the constitution of the Board of Trustees is an
industrial dispute and reliance has been placed upon a decision of the Labour
Appellate Tribunal in the case of Muzaffarpur Electricity Supply Company
Ltd.. reported in 1957 (II) Labour Law Journal, Page 542. It is, however, not
necessary for me to deal with this point as I am not giving any directions in
connection with the demand made both on behalf of the banks and the workmen
in connection with the constitution of the Board of Trustees. The present
scheme has, by and large, been working smoothly and no serious difficulties
of any kind have been brought to my notice. If any directions have to be given,
It is necessary that there should be a proper scheme framed for the election
of trustees. No such scheme has even been placed before me. There may be
some technical difficulties in giving effect to such scheme when formulated.
Taking all the circumstances into account, I do not see any necessity of
acceding to the demand made in this connection on behalf of the banks or on
behalf of the workmen.
7.30. The Miraj State Bank has contended that it has a provident fund
and that the contribution made by its employees and by the bank is at the
rate of 8-1/3 per cent of the basic pay, even though it is a bank liable to be
regarded as a D Class bank. This bank provides only one retiring benefit in
the shape of provident fund. There is no reason why this bank should not fall
in line with other banks and provide two retiring benefits. The provisions relating
to provident fund contained in this award will apply to this bank.
AI
7.33. As regards the claim that fixed amount of interest be paid on the
total contributions made to the provident fund both by the employers and the
employees, apart from the question of jurisdiction, it is not possible to give
any directions to that effect. A provident fund, in order to be a recognised
provident fund under the Income-tax Act is required to be vested in two or
more trustees or in the Official Trustee under trust which shall not be revocable
save with the consent of all beneficiaries. It is the earnings of the fund which
will determine the rate of interest.
7.34. As regards the number of representatives of workmen on the Board
of Trustees, the reason given by the Labour Appellate Tribunal for retaining
7.36. A demand has been made that unclaimed amounts in the fund
should be distributed pro-rata every three years amongst the existing
members of the fund. Apart from the question whether such a demand
constitutes an industrial dispute and apart from the question whether such
dispute could be adjudicated in the absence of other contributories to the
fund or in the absence of the Trustees, no case has been made out for such
299
300
7.37. A demand has been made on behalf of some of the banks that
where an employee has been guilty of misconduct causing financial loss to
the bank, the bank should be permitted to imburse such loss to the extent of
the contributions made to the provident fund by the bank concerned and
interest which has accrued due on the amounts so contributed in cases
where the employers, instead of inflicting the punishment of dismissal, is
content to inflict the punishment of discharge or is content to allow the
employee to resign. The demand as made appears to be reasonable. There
is no reason why in the case of misconduct of an employee which has caused
a loss to the employer, the employer should not be permitted to reimburse
the amount of the loss as aforesaid merely because the employer is desirous
of being a little lenient in dealing with his employee. There are, however,
other considerations which have to be borne in mind in dealing with this
demand. The provident fund scheme is based on the footing that the provident
fund should be a recognised provident fund within the meaning of the Incometax Act so as to attract its beneficient provisions in connection with provident
fund and the contributions made to it. The Income-tax Act, 1961, provides in
Part A of the Fourth Schedule for rules in connection with a recognised
provident fund. One of the aforesaid rules runs as under :
7.39. A claim has been made on behalf of workmen that a certified copy
of the Provident Fund Rules should be supplied to each workman. It is fair
that every employee who is subscribing to a provident fund should be supplied
with a copy of the Provident Fund Rules by the bank concerned, and I direct
accordingly.
BE
4.
7.40. A demand has been made on behalf of some workmen that moneys
standing to the credit of a workman in his provident fund account should be
allowed to be utilised for payment of insurance premia on policies taken out
by the workman. It was pointed out that the Punjab National Bank Ltd. already
provides for such facility. My attention was also invited to the rules contained
in the Employees Provident Fund Scheme, 1952, which permits withdrawals
to be made from the provident fund for payment of premia in respect of
insurance policies. Under this Scheme, such withdrawals are subject to certain
conditions and are controlled by the Commissioner for Employees Provident
Fund. There is no general demand for such facility, and I do not wish to make
it obligatory on all banks to provide this facility. I leave it to the discretion of
the individual banks concerned to provide such facility to the employees
under such conditions as may be prescribed by the rules relating to provident
fund.
301
302
*
(f)
AI
7.41. The State Bank of India and its Subsidiaries have contended that
I have no jurisdiction to make any award in connection with provident fund so
far as the State Bank of India and its Subsidiaries are concerned. Section 7
of the State Bank of India Act, 1955 relates Inter alia to provident fund
applicable to the employees of the Imperial Bank whose services have been
transferred to the State Bank of India. The provision relating to provident fund
of the Imperial Bank continue to apply to them until the same are duly altered
by the State Bank of India. The powers of the State Bank of India in connection
with provident fund are governed by the provisions of Section 50 of the Act
which lays down that the Central Board, after consultation with the Reserve
Bank and with the previous sanction of the Central Government may make
regulations to provide for the establishment and maintenance of provident
fund for the benefit of the employees of the State Bank of India. As regards
the Subsidiaries of the State Bank, Section 11 of the State Bank of India
(Subsidiary Banks) Act, 1959 deals with the question of provident fund in
respect of employees of the then existing banks whose services were
transferred to the Subsidiaries of the State Bank. Section 63 of the said Act
provides that the State Bank may, with the approval of the Reserve Bank
make in respect of Subsidiary banks regulations not inconsistent with the
Act and the rules made thereunder providing for the establishment and
maintenance of provident fund and the persons or authorities who shall
administer such fund. The aforesaid provisions present difficulties in my giving
any directions to the State Bank of India and its Subsidiaries in connection
with provident fund. But for technical difficulties coming in my way, I would
have given directions in connection with the State Bank of India and its
Subsidiaries similar to those given by me in connection with other banks as
regards provident fund.
AI
BE
7.42. I am conscious of the fact that the trustees of the provident fund of
various banks are not before me and the subscribers other than the workmen
subscribing to the provident fund of banks are also not before me. To the
extent that there exists any legal bar to my giving any directions which are
mandatory, the directions which I have given should be regarded as merely
recommendatory. If any of the banks other than the State Bank of India and
its Subsidiaries is, for any reason, unable to give effect to the provisions
herein contained relating to provident fund within a period of six months from
the date of publication of this award, it will be under an obligation to start a
new provident fund containing the aforesaid benefits or alternatively, a
supplementary provident fund which together with any existing provident fund
secures such benefits. It is intended that the provisions herein contained
relating to provident fund should become operative from the date when the
employees become entitled to receive remuneration on the basis of the new
scales of pay under this award. Until a provident fund scheme is framed by a
bank in accordance with what is contained herein or the existing provident
fund scheme is altered so as to fall in line with the provisions herein contained,
a bank shall be entitled to deduct from the remuneration payable to a workman
provident fund subscription at the rate herein provided and will be under an
obligation to contribute an equal amount and to the extent that such
subscription and contribution are not paid over to the trustees of a provident
fund, the same shall be held by the bank for the employee concerned in a
suspense deposit account to be ultimately paid over to the employee as a
retiring benefit. As observed by the Labour Appellate Tribunal, this may take
one of several forms; it may be found possible to deposit the moneys into the
account of the employee in the existing provident fund or it may be necessary
to institute a new provident fund in which the deposit can be made, or the
workmans employment may terminate before either of these alternatives is
available, in which case, the moneys will be paid over to him or his
representative direct. The Labour Appellate Tribunal permitted the banks to
follow the appropriate alternative. I give similar direction in this award.
now be a reference to the Income Tax Act, 1961 and the corresponding
provisions contained therein. The aforesaid provisions will not apply to the
State Bank of India and its Subsidiares.
303
304
CHAPTER VIII
Item No. 6 : PENSION AND GRATUITY
(1) Gratuity
V.
VI.
(1)
AI
I.
(2)
(3)
II.
Banks in Group B.
Gratuity is payable at the rate set out above as applicable to A
group banks, the maximum being 12 months pay.
III.
VIl. The pay, for purposes of calculating the gratuity, shall be the average
of the basic pay and special allowance and officiating allowance
payable during the 12 months next preceding death, disability,
retirement, resignation, or termination of services, as the case may
be. A bank will have the liberty to grant gratuity in excess of the
scale set out above in its discretion.
BE
Banks in Group C.
Gratuity is payable at the rate specified for banks in A group,
maximum being limited to 9 months pay.
X.
8.4. The Sastry Tribunal further directed that there should be no forefeiture of gratuity even for dismissal on account of misconduct except in
cases where such misconduct caused financial loss to the company, and
even in that case, limited the provision relating to forfeiture only to the extent
of such loss. The Labour Appellate Tribunal set aside the decision of the
Sastry Tribunal on this point and directed that an employee who was dismissed
for misconduct, shall not be entitled to gratuity.
8.5. The All India Bank Employees Association has claimed that gratuity
should be payable to an employee on retirement, termination of service,
retrenchment or workmans mental or physical disability to continue further
in service, at the rate of one months pay plus dearness allowance on the
basis of the salary last payable for every year of service or a major fraction
thereof, without any ceiling, that in case of death of an employee, his heirs
306
should be paid gratuity at the rate of two months pay plus dearness allowance
for each year of service or a major fraction thereof, that gratuity should also
be paid on voluntary retirement or resignation after completion of five years of
service, that any income-tax payable on such gratuity should be borne by
the bank and that where in any bank, provident fund scheme was introduced
late, the employees affected should be compensated for such a period, by
payment of additional gratuity at the usual rate in addition to the gratuity
normally admissible.
(ii)
AI
BE
8.7. The All India State Bank of India Staff Federation has made the
following demands : (1) Gratuity should be payable to an employee on
retirement, resignation, termination of service, retrenchment or mental or
physical disability to continue further in service at the rate of one months
pay plus dearness allowance (on the salary last payable) for every year of
service or a major fraction thereof, without any ceiling provided he has
completed five years of service. (2) In case of death of an employee, his heirs
or successors, should be paid gratuity at the rate of two months pay plus
dearness allowance for each year of service or a major fraction thereof if the
family of the deceased employee is not entitled to pension as demanded.
(3) Any income-tax payable on such gratuity should be borne by the bank.
(4) Where provident fund scheme was introduced late for any category of
employees, the employees affected should be compensated for such a period,
by payment of additional gratuity at the usual rate.
8.10. The Vadodra Rajya Bank Nokar Sangh has submitted that in addition
to the provident fund, employees should also have the benefit of adequate
pension and gratuity to enable them to have sufficient funds at the time of
retirement, resignation, death or termination of services, as the case may
be. It has made a demand for uniform rules for gratuity including the rate of
gratuity, irrespective of the size of the banks and it has claimed one months
wages for every year of service without any ceiling from the date of appointment,
on the basis of the pay last drawn, full gratuity being payable after five years
of service. It has further claimed that full gratuity should be paid without any
service restrictions to employees physically or mentally disabled to continue
further in service, or in cases of retrenchment or termination of services.
8.6. The All India Bank Employees Federation has claimed (1) one
months wages for every year of service without any ceiling calculated from
the date of appointment on the basis of the last pay drawn; (2) full gratuity
to be paid after five years of service; (3) full gratuity to be paid without any
service restriction to employees becoming physically or mentally disabled to
continue further in service, or in cases of retrenchment and termination of
services.
8.9 The State Bank of India Employees Association (Delhi Circle) has
made the following claims :
(i) The existing rules for payment of gratuity should remain (i.e. one
months pay for each completed year of service without any ceiling)
but it should be calculated from the date of appointment.
307
8.11. The Indian Overseas Bank Employees Union has claimed that the
rate of gratuity should be one months pay (pay being last drawn pay) plus
dearness allowance for each completed year of service without any ceiling,
and that the period of service should be calculated from the date of appointment
and that full gratuity should be paid on the completion of five years of service,
except in cases of retrenchment or termination of service of an employee
where no such limitation should be placed.
8.12.The State Bank of India Staff Union (Andhra Pradesh), the All India
Bank of Baroda Employees' Federation, the State Bank of Patiala (All Cadres)
Employees Association and the Allahabad Bank Employees' Union (Calcutta)
have made demands in respect of gratuity more or less similar to the demands
made by the All India Bank Employees Association. The State Bank of Patiala
(All Cadres) Employees' Association desires to have the dearness allowance
and dearness pay and other alowances included in the monthly pay for the
calculation of gratuity.
8.13.The Central Bank of Indian Employees Association, Patna, the
Central Bank of India Employees' Association, Muzaffarpur, and Amritsar
and the Bihar Provincial Central Bank of India Employees Association at
Muzaffarpur have made demands in respect of gratuity similar to the demands
of the All India Bank Employees' Federation.
8.14.The Cochin Commercial Bank Employees Association has made
the following demands in connection with gratuity :On the death of an employee while in the service of the banks :308
"One month's pay with dearness allowance for each year of service
subject to a maximum of 20 months' pay to be paid to the heirs,
executors, assignees or nominees.
BE
8.17.The State Bank of India has contended that this Tribunal has no
jurisdiction to entertain the demands for gratuity against it. Without prejudice
to this contention, it has stated that gratuity rules as applied to the State
Bank employees were the result of Tribunal's awards and did not impose a
ceiling on gratuity, and that the rules were excessively generous and much
better than those applicable in other banks. It has further stated that the
gratuity rules as framed by the Sastry Tribunal and modified by the Labour
Appellate Tribunal were unduly onerous inasmuch as they did not provide
(except in the case of voluntary resignation) for a minimum period of service
for entitlement of gratuity. It has contended that it was contrary to principle to
pay gratuity for short service and that a demand for a full or any gratuity on
voluntary retirement or resignation or cessation of service even for misconduct
after five years service or after any period of service was unjustified. It has
further pleaded that it was contrary to principle that the State Bank or any
employer should be called upon to bear income-tax payable on any gratuity
paid to an employee.
The Bank will be at liberty to grant gratuity in excess of the scales set
out above, in its discretion."
AI
8.18 It has sumbitted that this Tribunal should put a ceiling on gratuity
and gratuity should be payable after a proper and reasonable period of faithful
service and only if the employment terminates for reasons beyond the control
of the employee and in no case of misconduct of the employee.
8.19.The Subsidiaries of the State Bank of India have also taken the
above point of jurisdiction. Without prejudice to this contention they have
pleaded that in the case of those Subsidiary banks where there is a pension
scheme it would not be right to introduce a gratuity scheme as that would
amount to granting of three retirement benefits. while opposing the demands
of workmen it has been submitted that gratuity should be payable on voluntary
retirement or resignation of an employee only after 15 years service provided
the retirement or resignation was for causes beyond the employees' control.
It has further been submitted that it was contrary to principle that any incometax payable on gratuity should be paid by the employer.
8.20. The Bharatha Lakshmi Bank Ltd., the Gadodia Bank Ltd. and the
Jaya Laxmi Bank Ltd. submit that the present scheme of gratuity should
continue.
8.21. The Miraj State Bank does not have at present a gratuity scheme
and says that it is beyond its capacity to institute such a scheme. It has
pleaded that where a provident fund was already in existence, the institution
of a fresh scheme of gratuity in the form of additional retirement benefit would
310
(o)
depend entirely on the financial position of the industry, and has submitted
that the financial position of the industry did not warrant any additional
imposition in the form of a gratuity scheme.
8.22. It has been contended that this Tribunal has no jurisdiction to
make an award in connection with gratuity so far as it concerns the State
Bank of India in view of the provisions contained in sections 7 and 50 of the
State Bank of India Act, 1955. Section 50 of the aforesaid Act, to the extent
that it is relevant, provides as under :
**
(u)
50. (1) The Central Board may, after consultation with the Reserve Bank
and with the previous sanction of the Central Government make
regulations, not inconsistent with this Act and the rules made
thereunder, to provide for all matters for which provision is expedient
for the purpose of giving effect to the provisions of this Act.
**
**
**
**
**
AI
**
**
311
**
**
**
Clauses (o) and (u) are inapplicable where no fund is sought to be constituted.
Section 11 deals with those employees of the then existing banks whose
services have been transferred to the subsidiary banks. It provides that such
employees shall hold their service with the same rights and privileges as to
pension and gratuity which they enjoyed before the transfer until the same
were altered in pursuance of any law or in accordance with any provision
which for the time being governs his (their) services. To the extent, however,
that a legal bar, if any, exists to the making of any award in connection with
any person relating to gratuity the provisions herein contained should be
deemed to be recommendatory and not mandatory.
BE
(o)
**
**
**
2)
8.24. Under the provisions of the Sastry Award as modified, the scheme
for payment of gratuity is linked up with pay, the expression pay being
defined as being the average of the basic pay and special allowance and
officiating allowance payable during the twelve months next preceding death,
disability, retirement, resignation or termination of service, as the case may
be. It is contended that gratuity should be paid not on the basis of such
average but on the basis of the last pay drawn by the employee concerned.
In my view, the provision contained in the Sastry Award is less susceptible to
abuse than the provision which is demanded. In my view, there is no necessity
for making any change as demanded. Under this award, the scales of pay
and the scheme of dearness allowance have been altered and the amounts
of basic pay and special allowances payable to workmen have been increased.
In order that an unduly large burden may not be imposed upon banks and the
burden imposed may remain within the limits of the banks capacity to pay,
I direct that for the purpose of calculation of gratuity, basic pay for all classes
of banks under this award, except the banks in the Excepted List, shall be
deemed to be 80 per cent of that provided under this award so far as workmen
other than those belonging to the subordinate staff are concerned, and shall
be deemed to be 75 per cent of that provided under this award so far as
members of the subodinate staff are concerned. As regards the banks in the
Excepted List, for the purpose of calculating gratuity for workmen other than
312
those belonging to the subordinate staff, the basic pay shall be deemed to be
90 per cent of that provided under this award and for members of the subordinate
staff, the basic pay shall be the same as is provided under this award. For
the purpose of calculating gratuity, the special allowance and officiating
allowance for workmen employed in all banks shall be the same as provided
under this award.
BE
(3)
AI
8.26. The State Bank of India has contended that it should not be under
any obligation to pay gratuity without a ceiling thereon. The State Bank of
India has been placed in Class A. It cannot be treated for the purpose of
payment of gratuity in a manner different from the banks falling within that
class. It is, however, open to any bank to pay a larger sum by way of gratuity
than is provided under this award. The State Bank will be at liberty, but will
not be compellable, to pay gratuity larger than the one provided under this
award save and except in such cases, if any, where the bank may be under
a statutory obligation to pay the same.
8.27. A claim has been made that gratuity should be payable on voluntary
retirement or resignation of an employee only after fifteen years service, and
that too if the retirement or resignation was for causes beyond the employees
control. The employees, on the other hand, have urged that the provision
contained in the Sastry Award that gratuity should become payable on
voluntary retirement or resignation of an employee after ten years continuous
service should be altered so as to reduce the period of ten years to five years.
In my view, no case has been made out for any change by any of the parties.
(a)
(b)
8.28. On behalf of some of the banks it has been claimed that the amount
of gratuity should not become payable in cases where an employee is
discharged consequent upon his misconduct or is allowed to resign instead
of being dismissed consequent upon misconduct. This right has been claimed
only in case of those persons who are otherwise liable to be dismissed for
313
314
C Class bank including a bank in the Excepted List the amount of gratuity
shall be equal to one months pay for each completed year of service subject
to a maximum of nine months pay. Where, however, a workman employed in
any of the aforesaid banks has put in the service of over thirty years, an extra
amount by way of additional gratuity will become payable at the rate of
additional half months pay for each completed year of service beyond thirty
years. To that extent the maximum provided under the aforesaid clauses will
stand increased.
10. In computing the total income of a previous year of any person, any
income falling within any of the following clauses shall not be
included ** ** :
8.34. The pay for the purpose of calculating gratuity shall be the average
of the basic pay and special allowance and officiating allowance payable
during twelve months next preceding death, disability, retirement, resignation
or termination of service, as the case may be.
AI
BE
8.33. The length of service shall be calculated as the total period from
the day of initial appointment (whether permanent, temporary or on probation)
in the bank to the day of cessation of the banks service. In cases where
employees formerly employed in areas now forming part of Pakistan have
been re-employed in India after 15th August 1947, even though there might
be a break in their service the aggregate of the period of service in both areas
should be taken as the total period of service.
8.35. For the purpose of calculation of gratuity basic pay for all classes
of banks under this award, except the banks in the Excepted List. shall be
deemed to be 80 per cent of that provided under this award so far as workmen
other than those belonging to the subordinate staff are concerned, and shall
be deemed to be 75 per cent of that provided under this award so far as
members of the subordinate staff are concerned. As regards the banks in the
Excepted List, for the purpose of calculating gratuity for workmen other than
those belonging to the subordinate staff the basic pay shall be deemed to be
90 per cent of that provided under this award and for the members of the
subordinate staff the basic pay shall be the same as is provided under this
award. For the purpose of calculating gratuity, the special allowance and
officiating allowance for workmen employed in all banks shall be the same as
provided under this award.
8.36. Gratuity should be paid to a workman even if he enters the service
of another bank, notwithstanding any condition to the contrary in any scheme.
8.37. The banks will be at liberty to pay gratuity in excess of what is
herein provided.
8.38. Income-tax and super-tax, if any, payable on the amount of gratuity
will not be borne by the bank.
8.39. Where there is a pension scheme in existence the workmen will
have to choose between the scheme of gratuity under this award and the
banks pension scheme unless any bank desires to give the benefit of both to
the workmen. It is not the intention of this Tribunal to replace a more favourable
316
AI
BE
8.41. Under the provisions relating to provident fund, I have directed that
those banks which have not established any provident fund, should do so
within a period of six months from the date of the publication of this award.
There may be workmen who may have put in several years of service before
they become entitled to receive the benefit of the provident fund, and their
case requires special consideration. The Sastry Tribunal had to deal with a
similar situation and the remedy found by the Sastry Tribunal was to provide
for additional gratuity for such persons. I direct that where there has been no
provident fund scheme in existence prior to the date of this award an additional
gratuity calculated at the rates mentioned in this chapter should be paid to
workmen and that for this purpose, their length of service should be computed
at half the number of full years of completed service from the day of initial
appointment (whether permanent, temporary or on probation) in the banks
concerned, till the date of introduction of the provident fund scheme.
Niren De from Calcutta who argued the matter for and on behalf of the
employees. This contribution was made by the employees many years back
under a contributory pension scheme.Apart from the question of my jurisdiction
to deal with the demand, in my view, the employees are not entitled to any of
the reliefs claimed in connection therewith.
8.42. In a case where there is an existing provident fund but a work man
has not been allowed to join such fund after his confirmation, he should be
given an additional gratuity at the rate mentioned in this chapter for the period
commencing from the date of his confirmation to the date of his joining the
fund, the length of service being calculated for this purpose to the nearest full
year.The State Bank of India Employees Association (Bengal Circle) has
made a claim for the refund of five per cent contribution to the pension fund
made by the employees of the bank before such contribution was discontinued
as a rsult of the directions given under the Sastry Award. In the alternative, it
has claimed that a special gratuity may be paid equivalent to the amount
standing to the credit of an employee in the said pension fund. The State
Bank of India has opposed this demand. A similar claim was made before
the Sastry Tribunal, but it appears that the same was not pressed by Mr.
317
The Imperial Bank, and, thereafter its successor, the State Bank of India,
is not claiming now this five per cent contribution from the workmen.
8.45. The workmen have demanded pension in addition to provident fund
and gratuity.
8.46. The All India Bank Employees Association has claimed that the
normal pensionable age should be 60 years, that maximum pension should
be Rs. 750 per mensem, that pensionable service of an employee should be
counted from the date of his appointment, that the minimum age limit for the
purpose should be 18 years, that in calculating pension, the pay last payable
to an employee should be the basis, that the amount of pension should be
calculated on number of years of service divided by 50 multiplied by pay last
payable (inclusive of special allowance and officiating allowance), and that
the benefit of pension must be guaranteed for five years, i.e., if a pensioner
dies before drawing pension for less than five years, his heirs, assignees or
318
nominees should draw the same pension until completion of five years, with
the exception that if an employee retired on grounds of health before reaching
the age of 60, he should be eligible to proportionate pension provided he had
served for at least 10 years. It has further claimed that in case of an employees
death while in service, his legal heirs should be paid pension at the rates
prescribed above for the period indicated below :
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
Length of service
Period for which payable
10 years
2 years
Exceeding 10 years but below 15 years
3 years
Exceeding 15 years but below 20 years
4 years
Exceeding 20 years
5 years
3.
4.
5.
It has claimed that a pensioner should have the right to commute any part of
his pension and has demanded that dearness allowance at the prescribed
rates should be paid on pensions.
BE
8.47. The All India Bank Employees Federation has claimed that all
permanent employees, including part-time employees, should be eligible for
pension, that pensionable service of an employee should be counted from
the date of his appointment, that in calculating pension last wages drawn by
an employee be taken into consideration, that the amount of pension be
calculated on number of years of service divided by 50 and multiplied by the
last total salary drawn, that pension benefit must be granted for a minimum
period of five years, that commutation of pension be allowed as per Central
Government Rules and that pensioners should be allowed to accept reemployment after retirement.
2.
AI
8.48. The All India State Bank of India Staff Federation has claimed a
pension scheme similar to the one demanded by the All India Bank Employees
Association but without mentioning the minimum pension of Rs. 750. This
Federation has also claimed that a pensioner shall have the right to commute
his pension as per rules applicable to the Central Government employees,
and that dearness allowance should be paid on pensions at the rate of 25 per
cent with a minimum of Rs. 40 to the clerical staff, etc., and Rs. 25 to the
subordinate staff.
8.49. The State Bank of India Employees Association (Bengal Circle)
has made the following demands :
1.
(a)
(b)
Length of service
8.50. A more or less similar scheme has been suggested by the State
Bank of India Employees Association(Delhi Circle).
8.51. The Cochin Commercial Bank Employees Association has
submitted the following pension scheme.
(i)
(ii)
for the employees of the Exchange Banks, save that at the time of retirement
an employee shall have a right to opt for the banks pension or retiring
allowance scheme or the award prescribed gratuity. It is further pleaded that
pension or retiring allowance schemes of the Exchange Banks have been
laid down by their head-offices abroad, and that the same should not be
disturbed.
(vi)
BE
8.52. The State Bank of India Staff Union, Andhra Pradesh, Vijayawada,
the State Bank of Patiala (All Cadres) Employees Association, the Employees
Association of the Union Bank of Bijapur and Sholapur Ltd., the Indian Overseas
Bank Employees Union, Madras, the All India Bank of Baroda Employees
Federation and the Allahabad Bank Employees Union, Calcutta have made a
demand for a pension scheme which is more or less similar to the pension
scheme demanded by the All India Bank Employees Association.
8.57. The State Bank of India has referred to the provisions of section
7(2) read with sections 33 and 50 of the State Bank of India Act, 1955, and
has submitted that in view of these statutory provisions any rules to be framed
or any regulations to be introduced in connection with any pension scheme
require the previous sanction of the Central Government and that the State
Bank had no powers and should not be directed to make any alterations in
the conditions, regulations, rules or quantum of any benefits in either the
pension fund of the Imperial Bank of India or in that of the State Bank of India.
It has also pleaded that this Tribunal has no jurisdiction to revise the terms,
conditions, rules and regulations in connection with the pension funds or to
direct the introduction of any other superannuation fund or benefits. On the
merits, it has contended that the State Banks pension scheme was more
generous than was justified in the light of superannuation schemes prevalent
in comparable employment and has pleaded as follows :
AI
8.54. The Vadodra Rajya Bank Nokar Sangh has given no particular
pension scheme but it would also like to have one as it considers that the
banking industry is now well-established and financially more sound and is in
a position to give both pension and gratuity.
8.55. The Indian Banks Association has strongly opposed the introduction
of any pension scheme where no such scheme is in existence. It has
submitted that no case has been made out for a third retiring benefit and has
pleaded that if three retiring benefits were given, the burden on the resources
of banks would be crushing.
8.56. The Bombay Exchange Banks Association has characterised the
demand of the workmen as extravagant and unjustified and submitted that
the Tribunal should not lay down any directions regarding pension and gratuity
321
8.63. When any such change is being effected, a question may arise
regarding the extent to which such change is warranted having regard to the
changes made in the wage scales. As I have altered the wage scales, it
would be but fair both to the banks and the workmen, that I should indicate
the extent of the change that I would consider reasonable, in view of the
change in the wage scales. The new scales of wages fixed by me provide not
merely for a merger of considerable part of the dearness allowance but also
provide for an increase in original basic wage received by workmen. Having
taken all the circumstances into account, I should consider that for the purpose
of calculation of pension of workmen other than those belonging to the
subordinate staff basic pay may be taken to be 80 per cent of the basic pay
provided in this award, and so far as the members of the subordinate staff are
concerned the basic pay may be taken to be 75 per cent of the basic pay
provided under this award, from the date that the new scales of wages come
into force. I would regard a change effected to this extent in the pension or
retiring allowance schemes to be reasonable. No change in respect of special
allowance or officiating allowance payable under this award would be
necessary.
BE
8.59. The Bharatha Lakshmi Bank has pleaded that smaller banks will
not be able to provide pensions to their employees. The Jaya Laxmi Bank
has pleaded that in view of the existence of provident fund, and in view of the
contemplated increase in the wage structure, the question of payment of
pension should not be considered. The Miraj State Bank has submitted that
it is beyond its capacity to institute a pension scheme.
necessary for some of these banks to make suitable changes in their pension
or retiring allowance schemes having regard to the new scales of pay provided
by me which materially differ from the old scales of pay.
AI
8.60. The demand for the conferment of three retiring benefits is not
justified, having regard to all the facts and circumstances of the case. The
workmen are entitled either to have gratuity or in the alternative pension or
retiring allowance. Where there is not already in existence any pension
scheme, no directions are given for the purpose of providing one. In cases
where pension schemes or retiring allowance schemes are already in existence
a workman will have the option to choose whether he will receive gratuity or
opt for the pension scheme or retiring allowance.
324
CHAPTER IX
Item No. 7 : LEAVE RULES
9.1. The Sastry Tribunal after carefully considering the needs of the
workmen and the capacity of the banks has laid down detailed rules in
connection with leave. The directions so given with the modifications made
therein by the Labour Appellate Tribunal, provide as under :
(i) Existing Leave Rules
General
BE
(9) The first day of employees leave is the working day succeeding
that upon which he makes over charge. The last day of an employees leave
is the working day preceding that upon which he reports his return to duty.
AI
(3) The privilege leave due to an employee is the period which he has
earned diminished by the period of leave actually taken.
Leave Salary
An employee on privilege leave shall draw a leave pay equal to his average
pay i.e. the average monthly pay (earned while on duty) during the twelve
calendar months immediately preceding that in which the employee proceeds
on leave.Pay means the aggregate of basic pay, dearness allowance,
officiating allowance and special allowance,if any.
BE
AI
leave in excess of the maximum of three months. Leave should accure due
even when an employee is on leave. Privilege leave should not be refused for
exigencies of work or otherwise. No employee should be recalled back from
leave. If an employee is called for duty before the expiry of his leave, he
should be allowed travelling allowance and be paid wages in lieu of due leave
which is refused or such leave should be allowed to be accumulated beyond
other limits. Ten days notice should be required for grant of privilege leave
except in urgent cases and the bank should inform the employee in writing 7
days before the commencement of his leave.
The Vadodra Rajya Bank Nokar Sangh has made the following demand:-
Casual Leave
Fifteen days casual leave in a calendar year. Six days casual leave
may be availed at a stretch which, with prefixing or suffixing,, of Sundays
and holidays, may extend up to 10 days.
BE
"Sundays and other public holidays falling within a period of casual leave
should not be counted as part of the casual leave.
There is one association which has asked for casual leave of 20 days in
a calendar year.There is another association which has asked for 10 days
casual leave at a stretch excluding Sundays and holidays.
Quarantine Leave
AI
The All India Bank Employees Federation has made a demand that the
office bearers and representatives of the Federation and its affiliated units be
allowed one months special leave to attend meetings, conferences and
delegations, etc, in a year.
All categories of workmen should be granted thirty days sick leave for
every year of service with full pay and allowances with a maximum of 12
months during the service period. In case of prolonged illness further sick
leave on half pay and full allowance should be allowed up to six months.
Service period should be counted from 1950 for the purpose of earning sick
leave. There is also a demand for one months sick leave for every year of
service with full pay, with a right to accumulate it up to 24 months.
Extraordinary Leave
When no leave is due to a workman, extraordinary leave on grounds of
continued illness should be granted on loss of pay up to a period of six
months. There is also a demand that Extraordinary leave should be given up
to one year on loss of pay when no leave is due and that the period of leave
329
330
(a)
2 weeks a year.
(b)
3 weeks a year.
(c)
4 weeks a year.
It is further submitted that it should be provided that privilege leave could only
be accumulated over a period of two years whereafter there should be no
further accumulation, that privilege leave should not be availed of by any
employee on more than two occasions in any year, that it should be open to
the management to call upon any employee to go on privilege leave at any
time in its discretion to suit the exigencies of service and that an employee
wishing to curtail leave sanctioned to him may do so only with the prior
approval of the management. It is further submitted that in order to obviate
the chances of a dispute arising, it should be made explicit that no privilege
leave or sick leave shall accrue to an employee in respect of leave other than
casual leave availed of by him. As regards sick leave, the Bombay Exchange
Banks Association submits that it should be at half pay only and should
accrue at the rate of 30 days for every year of active service after confirmation
subject to a maximum of 9 months or 270 days, that commutation of sick
leave on the basis of full pay should not ordinarily be permitted, that
management may, however, at its sole discretion, permit commutation in
cases of definite hardship, proved to its satisfaction that applications for sick
leave should invariably be accompanied by a certificate from a registered
medical practitioner and that where there was an authorised doctor appointed
by the bank, applications for sick leave must be recommended by him. It is
submitted that the demand of the workmen for retroactive effect from 1950 for
computing service for the purpose of earning sick leave was unreasonable. In
connection with maternity leave, the Bombay Exchange Banks Association
submit that the award of such leave would discourage employment of women
and should not be granted, that the matter should be left to the discretion of
the management and that, in any event, such leave should be on half pay
only. In connection with the demand for special leave it is submitted that it is
not, an industrial dispute and must be left to the discretion of the management.
It is further submitted that unauthorised absence from duty by an employee
should automatically result in the forfeiture of all benefits accruing under the
terms and conditions of service during the period of such absence.
AI
BE
9.4 The Indian Banks Association has suggested that no employee can
take privilege leave on the ground of illness whenever sick leave is available.
Under the Sastry Award as modified privilege leave of 1 month will be earned
by an employee in A and B Class banks after he has put in eleven months
of service. The Indian Banks Association submits that for calculating 11
months service all leave taken, other than casual leave, should be excluded.
The Sastry Award contains a provision that where a person on casual leave
combines with such leave any gazetted and public holidays and Sundays so
as to increase the absence at any one time beyond six days, the entire
period should be treated as a period of privilege leave. The Indian Banks
Association contends that this provision enables the employee to have privilege
leave without following the requisite procedure for obtaining the same and
results in the splitting up of privilege leave into small bits which was not
desirable both from the point of view of the employees and of the banks. It
has claimed that if casual leave was extended beyond six days, then the
entire period should be treated as unauthorised absence and the employee
should not be entitled to any emoluments for such period. The Indian Banks
Association has alleged that employees have come to look upon casual
leave as something which they must take, whether the circumstances justify
taking such leave or not, and that in applications for casual leave, reasons
are given which are very vague. They have therefore sought directions to the
effect that every employee who wants to avail himself of casual leave must in
his application state clearly the reasons why casual leave is wanted, and in
case of emergency where casual leave is availed of before taking prior
permission, an employee must, after returning to duty, give an explanation
immediately stating the reasons why casual leave was taken, and that if on
scrutiny of the reasons given, the management came to the conclusion that
the grounds on which such leave was taken were unjustified, the management
should be allowed to treat such absence as unauthorised absence for which
the employee concerned will not be entitled to receive any emoluments. The
Indian Banks Association has under item No. 20 claimed that leave rules
should be more restricted in rural areas than those prescribed to urban aeas
so that leave entitlements in branches in rural areas may be three-fourths of
those which may be prescribed in other areas.
generous. In connection with casual leave the Association has stated that
considering the low number of working hours of bank employees and the
tendency of the employees to treat casual leave as a matter of right and
thereby abuse it, the total number of days casual leave that may be granted
to an employee should not exceed 6 in a year. As regards privilege leave, it
is submitted that the same should be on a graduated basis as follows :
9.3 The demands made by the employees have been generally opposed
by banks. Some of the banks have contended that the leave rules prescribed
by the Sastry Tribunal were on very liberal scales and that although the
banks feel that leave entitlements should be curtailed having regard to the
present needs of the nation and the industry, the banks were prepared not to
insist on any curtailment as they were of the view that the basic structure of
the Sastry Award should be left unchanged. They have suggested that certain
directions should be given in order to prevent abuses.
9.5 The Bombay Exchange Banks Association has contended that the
leave benefits available to employees under the existing award were over-
9.6 The State Bank of India has contended that the demand in connection
with casual leave disregarded the very nature and purpose of the leave and
the principles behind granting such leave, that casual leave could not be
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(8)
9.9. The Sastry Award provides that an employee already on leave may
be recalled when the authority granting the leave considers this to be
necessary in the interests of the service. The workmen have demanded that
no employee should be recalled back from leave. The Labour Appellate Tribunal
has mitigated the hardship incidental to such recall by providing that when an
employee is recalled, the travelling expenses of the workman to and from the
place where the workman was spending his holiday should be provided by
the bank. This would not cover the travelling expenses of the members of the
family of such workman. An employee when going on leave may have taken
the members of his family also with him and they may have to come back
with him. It is but fair that when his leave is cut short in the interests of the
work of the bank, the expenses incurred by him for taking his wife and his
children ordinarily residing with and wholly dependent upon him from the
place of work to the place where he might have gone and of bringing them
back should be provided by the bank. I accordingly direct that when a workman
who has gone on leave is recalled back from leave, the bank should pay to
him the actual travelling expenses incurred by him on account of himself, his
wife, and his children ordinarily residing with and wholly dependent on him for
going from the place of work to the place where he and members of his family
may be at the time of the recall and for coming back from such place to the
place of work. A workman will be entitled to claim travelling expenses of his
wife and children provided they have accompanied him whilst going to such
place or have gone to such place within a week of his going there and have
accompanied him whilst returning back from such place or have returned to
the place of work within a week of his return to that place. In my view no other
changes are required to be made in the aforesaid general rules provided by
the Sastry Award as modified.
BE
9.7. The Miraj State Bank has submitted that its leave rules are governed
by an agreement with workers which provide generous conditions of service
in respect of privilege leave, casual leave and sick leave and no further alteration
in that agreement was called for on the merits or was permissible in law. The
bank is also against the grant of any other form of leave apart from privilege
leave, casual leave and sick leave.
general rules set out above will therefore be substituted by the following
clause :
AI
9.8. The Sastry Tribunal has provided that when an employee has gone
on leave, unless he was permitted to do so by the authority which granted his
leave, he may not return to duty more than fourteen days before the expiry of
the period of leave granted to him. In effect, this provision confers a right upon
an employee to return to duty at his sweet will and pleasure without any
permission before the expiry of the period of leave granted to him, provided he
returns not more than fourteen days before the expiry of such leave. When an
employee goes on fairly long leave, arrangements may have to be made by
the bank concerned for the disposal of work during his absence. An employee,
by returning to duty at any time within 14 days prior to the expiry of the period
of leave without prior permission, may disturb the arrangement made by the
bank for the period of leave taken by the employee. He cannot therefore have
an unfettered right to return back to duty. It is possible that the bank might
not have sanctioned the leave if it had been asked for a shorter period than
the one for which leave was actually demanded. Under the provisions of the
Award, as it stands, a workman may be enabled to convert a long leave into
a short one. In a proper case, a bank may, having regard to the circumstances
under which a workman may seek to return earlier, permit a workman to
return before the expiry of the period of his leave, but there should be no
provision which should confer upon a workman a right so to return. The
provisions of the Sastry Award therefore need to be modified.Clause 8 of the
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9.15. A demand has been made on behalf of workmen that Sundays and
other public holidays falling within the period of casual leave should not be
counted as part of the casual leave.In support of this demand a reference has
been made to the recommendation of the Second Pay Commission at page
48 of its report which is as under :
BE
9.11. The banks have claimed that as privilege leave is intended for rest
and recuperation, it should not be taken in more than two instalments in a
year.This demand seems to be reasonable.Banks having numerous
employees may have to arrange the leave programme of the employees so
as not to disturb the work of the bank. If privilege leave is taken in driblets, it
will not serve the purpose for which it is intended to be taken. I therefore
direct that workmen will not be entitled to take privilege leave on more than
two occasions in a year. This will not include the occasion when a workman
has gone on privilege leave but has been recalled.In special circumstances
an application may be made for the grant of such leave on more than two
occasions in a year and it will then be in the absolute discretion of the bank
concerned whether to grant such leave or not.
enjoyed without any prior intimation for reasons which cannot justify the
taking of such leave.This leave is really intended to cover special, emergent
or unforeseen circumstances and cannot be taken on the footing that it is the
right of the workmen to take the same upto the maximum limit provided,
whether such circumstances exist or not. It cannot be regarded as an accrued
unconditional benefit which has to be enjoyed whether the conditions provided
for its enjoyment exist or not.Any absence from duty without satisfying the
requisite conditions under which such leave may be taken would justify any
bank in not treating the employee as on casual leave but as being absent
without leave.Even where leave has been applied for and granted and the
reasons given for such leave have been subsequently found to have been
falsely given, a bank would be at liberty after giving the workman an opportunity
of being heard in the matterto treat the workman as if the workman had
been granted leave without pay. This will be without prejudice to any other
action which the bank may, under the circumstances, be entitled to take
against the workman.
months privilege leave and has thereafter served for 10 months he should
become entitled to enjoy further privilege leave of 1 month. It was similarly
not the intention that a person employed in a C Class bank or a D Class bank
who has enjoyed privilege leave for 3/4 of a month and has thereafter put in
10 months of service should become entitled to enjoy another of a month
of privilege leave. In any event, that is not my intention and I direct that in
calculating the period of eleven months of completed service by workmen in
A and B Class banks under this award and for the purpose of calculating the
period of 11 months service by workmen in the case of C Class banks
under this award including banks in the Excepted List, the period of privilege
leave enjoyed should not be counted.
AI
Under the existing orders, public holidays and weekly offs falling
within a period of casual leave are included in the casual leave.
There appears to be no valid reason why it should be so, and we
recommend that such public holidays and weekly offs should not
be treated as part of the casual leave.
9.14. In connection with casual leave, the Sastry Tribunal has already
laid down that it is only intended to meet special or unforseen circumstances
for which provision cannot be made by exact rules.Some of the banks have
shown that such leave has sometimes been lightly applied for or has been
9.17. In connection with sick leave, the Sastry Tribunal has laid down
that "where an employee has served the bank for at least a period of five
years, he may, if he so requests, be permitted to avail himself of sick leave
on full pay upto a maximum period of six months during the full period of his
service, such leave on full pay being entered as twice the amount of leave
taken in his sick leave account. At the hearing the workmen desired that the
word may should be altered to shall. In order to avoid any possible dispute
on the question of construction, I direct that a change be made by substituting
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the word shall for may in the aforesaid clause. Save as aforesaid, there
does not appear to be any case made out for a change in the conditions laid
down in the Sastry Award relating to sick leave.
9.23. The Second Pay Commission has at page 418 of its report referred
to the facilities enjoyed by the staff under the Ministries of Railways and
Defence and the Department of Posts and Telegraphs, and observed as
follows:
9.18. No case has been made out for any change in the existing provisions
of the Sastry Award in connection with quarantine leave, extraordinary leave
and maternity leave.
(vi) Special Casual Leave
(ii) In the Posts and Telegraphs Department, special casual leave may
be granted for upto 20 days in a year, for (a) waiting on deputation
on the Minister, heads of Departments etc., (b) for attending in a
representative capacity, all-India conference and meetings of
recognised associations and unions, and (c) to office bearers and
members of executive councils of all-India unions also for attending
their circle conferences General Secretaries of all India unions may
be allowed special casual leave upto 25 days.
BE
(i)
9.19. A demand was made before the Sastry Tribunal for the grant of
special leave for office-bearers of unions and association to carry out their
trade union functions, duties and activities. It was then stated that some of
the trade union officials have to attend proceedings of labour courts and
tribunals and take part in the conference of trade unions. The Sastry Tribunal
held that no case had been made out for the grant of special leave and
observed that legitimate trade union activity should be conducted out of office
hours and without detriment to the interests of the bank. As regards leave for
attending labour courts or tribunals, the Sastry Tribunal observed as follows:
AI
9.20. The above observation regarding special leave for attending Labour
Courts and Tribunals had been made, before the Supreme Court gave its
decision in the case of Rohtas Sugar Ltd. and others vs. Mazdoor Seva
Sangh and others, reported in 1960 (I) Labour Law Journal, 567. In that case,
the Supreme Court set aside the directions which had been given to the
effect that workmen attending the proceedings before the Industrial Tribunal
should be treated as on special leave with pay for the period of such
attendance.
9.21. In connection with the demand made by the employees for special
leave, it is contended by the banks that this Tribunal has no jurisdiction to
deal with the matter. The aforesaid decision of the Supreme Court which is
relied upon was given in a case where an Industrial Tribunal sought to give
directions to a party appearing before it to grant to other parties before it,
namely, workmen then appearing before it, special leave with pay for the
period during which such workmen appeared before the Tribunal. That decision
has no bearing on the question of the jurisdiction or the powers of an Industrial
Tribunal when a dispute has been referred to it for adjudication relating to
leave rules which would include rules relating to various kinds of leave,
including special leave which may be given to workmen. In my view, I have
jurisdiction to consider and decide on merits the issue whether special leave
should be granted to workmen or not.
9.22. The State Bank of India is actually allowing to the office bearers
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with this demand, the Sastry Tribunal observed that the provisions for leave
granted by it would cover all the just and reasonable needs of the workmen
and that the workmen could, in such cases, utilise the ordinary leave
accumulated by them upto three months. It however added that if the banks
were not able to grant such leave owing to exigencies of the bank work, the
workmen should be paid on retirement the pay and allowances for such
period for which the leave was withheld. No case has been made out before
me for a change in the above provisions in the Sastry Award as modified, and
I give similar directions in this award. The aforesaid observations will equally
apply to the demand of furlough leave
9.25 The Commission considered that the facilities already allowed were
generous and recommended that facilities broadly modelled on those provided
by the Department of Post and Telegraphs or the Ministry of Defence to their
civilian employees, may be extended to other employees representing
recognised service organisations.
AI
BE
9.26 Having regard to the fact that workmen in the banking industry have
been organised on an all-India basis and there are all-India organisations to
which various unions of workmen employed in banks have been affiliated, I
consider it in the interests of the industry that special casual leave should be
granted to the office-bearers and Executive Committee members of the
organisations hereinafter mentioned in order to enable them to attend meetings
and conferences. I accordingly direct that the office bearers and the Executive
Committee members of the All India Bank Employees Association, the All
India Bank Employees Federation and the All India State Bank of India Staff
Federation, who are workmen employed in banks governed by the award
should be given by the respective banks special casual leave upto 7 days in
a calendar year for the purpose of attending meetings and conferences of
their respective organisations. The Stale Bank of India and some other banks
are giving special leave to office bearers and committee members of various
unions. It is not intended by this award that these facilities when they are in
excess of what is hereby provided should in any way be discontinued or
curtailed. In this award, having regard to the limited quantity of evidence
available on the subject, facilities only of a limited nature have been directed
to be provided.
9.29. No case has been made out by the Indian Banks Association for
reducing the leave entitlement in branches in rural areas to three-fourths of
those presribed for other areas.
9.27. There was a demand made before the Sastry Tribunal for special
leave, for employees who appear for examinations conducted by universities
and by the various institutes of bankers. The Sastry Tribunal, in dealing with
this matter, stated that it could not grant this leave as part of its leave rules
and observed that it had no doubt that the banks would sympathetically deal
with individual cases on their special merits. I will only repeat what the Sastry
Tribunal has said in connection with the demand of the workmen before me
for the grant of study leave.
(viii) Leave Preparatory to Retirement
9.28. There was a demand made before the Sastry Tribunal for six months
leave with full pay and allowances preparatory to retirement. While dealing
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9.31. In reply to the above demand, the Bank of Baroda has submitted
that permanent employee has to give a months notice before leaving the
service of the bank, that an employee other than a permanent employee or a
probationer has to give 14 days notice that the obligation of giving notice on
the bank and the employee is reciprocal, and that if an employee is allowed
to avail of his leave during the period of such notice, the very purpose of
notice will be defeated. The other supplementary demands are also opposed.
The question relating to accumulated leave on termination of employment
has already been dealt with to the extent that the termination has been
brought about by the retirement of the employee. Except to the extent already
provided no case has been made out in connection with these demands and
the same are rejected.
9.32. Save as provided in this award, no demands made by the workmen
or the banks in connection with leave rules have been granted.
9.33. I make an award in connection with leave rules terms of the Sastry
Award as modified by the Labour Appellate Tribunals decision set out earlier,
with the alterations, modifications and additions made by me as set out
above. Wherever the provisions of any law applicable to any place are in
conflict with the provisions herein contained, the provisions of law should be
applied.
340
The banks were given liberty by the Sastry Tribunal to fix at their discretion
the actual timing of work provided the maximum number of hours of work
flxed by the award were observed. The Sastry Tribunal felt that many types of
work in a bank could not be carried within a system of fixed hours, say,
between 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. For instance, the work of cash book writers, day
book writers, supplementary book writers, internal audit, pass-book writing,
etc. could conveniently be attended to only at different times. Despatchers
will have to take up work in connection with posting of letters only after they
are signed by officers. Sweeping and cleaning of bank premises or opening
and locking of safe vaults may have to be done even before or after such
prescribed working hours. Workmen in charge of safe vaults may have to
remain beyond such hours to suit the convenience of customers. Godown
deliveries may have to be made outside such hours even as desired by the
borrowers. The Sastry Tribunal has in this connection observed as follows:
AI
BE
To lay down a general rule fixing the actual timing of office hours
as distinct from the total number of hours for a days work would be
to ignore the realities of the situation and the exigencies of bank
work of various types. It is, therefore, necessary to recognise the
right of bank managements to relax the rigidity in the observance
of the usual hours of work wherever it is necessary or convenient or
desirable to do so.
10.2. The Labour Appellate Tribunal modified the Sastry Award by laying
down that where godown-keepers were required to remain in attendance at
the bank during the office hours, the directions regarding office hours and
overtime were to apply to them as to other employees of the bank and that in
cases where a chokidar has been employed to guard the banks premises
and he is one of the several chokidars and is kept on duty for a period of time
generally about 8 hours, the hours of work should not exceed a shift of 8
hours in 24 hours.
10.3. On behalf of a large number of employees it is pleaded that a
period of 6 hours of work on week days (other than Saturdays) and 3
hours of work on Saturdays excluding the recess period should be prescribed
for all categories of workmen including the watch and ward staff and godownkeepers and that for employees working on accounting machines the working
hours should be 4 hours on week days (other than Saturdays) and 2 hours
on Saturdays. There are, however, some unions which appear to be satisfied
with the present hours of work which are 6 hours on week days (other than
Saturdays) and 4 hours on Saturdays. There is one union which demands
only 2 hours work for the accounting machine operators on Saturdays.
10.4. The Indian Banks Association is in favour of retention of the existing
provisions of the Sastry Award. It has, however, suggested that provision
should be made for a recess period also on Saturdays leaving the actual
342
hours of work as they were prescribed by the Sastry Award. It has pleaded
that as regards the members of the supervisory staff drawing monthly
emoluments up to Rs. 500 who, by reason of the amended definition of the
term workman have been included in the expression workman directions
may be given that the actual hours of work exclusive of recess period on
week days (exclusive of Saturdays) should not exceed 8 hours a day and on
Saturdays should not exceed 5 hours a day. It contends that there is no
justification for the demand for lesser hours of work for accounting machine
operators. It has pleaded that the accounting machines were provided to help
the employees to avoid mental fatigue caused by routine calculations and
that the operation of the accounting machines did not involve effort greater
than that involved in other work done by other employees so as to warrant the
reduction of hours of work.
10.8. Shri Sule, the learned advocate on behalf of the All India Banks
Employees Association, has pleaded that Saturday is regarded as half day
and if the employees are made to work for four hours on that day, it would be
more than half a day. His demand is that on Saturdays the employees should
work for three and a half hours which by itself is more than half the time
provided under the Sastry Award, for week days other than Saturdays. In
connection with this demand Shri Phadke, the learned advocate on behalf of
the Indian Banks Association, has pointed out that it was not possible to
have a clearing on Saturdays with only three and a half hours of work and that
this difficulty was brought to the notice of the Sastry Tribunal which raised
the working hours to four hours.
AI
BE
watch and ward staff, godown-keepers and subordinate staff should work for
smaller number of hours. The Bharatha Lakshmi Bank submits that the hours
of work as demanded by the employees do not suit smaller banks and that
the hours of work prescribed under the Shops and Establishments Acts
should be made applicable to D Class banks. The Jaya Laxmi Bank desires
that the working hours should be raised to 8 hours on week days and 6 hours
on Saturdays excluding the recess interval. On behalf of the Miraj State
Bank it has been pointed out that its working hours are 11-30 A.M. to 3-30
P.M. and 4-30 P.M. to 7-30 P.M on week days (excluding Saturdays) and 1130 A.M. to 2-30 P.M. and 3-30 P. M. to 4-30 P.M. on Saturdays making a
total of 39 hours weekly. The bank is opposed to any change in its present
working hours.
10.6. The State Bank of India has submitted that the members of the
subordinate staff are required to attend office a little earlier and to leave a little
later than the members of the clerical staff in almost all organisations and
that there was no difference in principle so far as banks were concerned. As
regards the watch and ward staff, it says that by their very nature of duties,
the limitation of hours demanded by the union was unreasonable and without
precedent and that as a rule the local Shops and Establishments Act exempt
watch and ward staff in respect of working hours provided they were given a
weekly off day. It has pleaded that a similar rule should apply to the watch
and ward staff of the bank.
10.9. The working hours permissible under some of the local Shops.and
Establishments Acts are 48 per week and not more than nine hours per day.
The working hours prescribed for the clerical staff in the banking industry
under the Sastry Award, as modified are 36 per week. Under the Sen
Award the working hours oh Saturdays were fixed at 3 hours and the Sastry
Tribunal raised them to 4 hours after considering the special circumstances
shown by the banks for such a change. The daily and weekly limits perscribed
by the Sastry Tribunal are far below the level of the statutory limits under the
various Shops and Establishments Acts. The convenience of the public has
also to be considered. No case has been made out for reducing the hours of
work.
10.10. There is not much merit in the demand that the hours of work
should be the same both for clerical staff and the subordinate staff, having
regard to the nature of the work of the members of the subordinate staff and
having regard to the fact that the presence of some of them, in any event, is
necessary before the members of the other staff arrive at the premises of the
bank and after the members of the other staff leave the bank. The total number
of hours of work put in by the members of the subordinate staff do not compare
unfavourably with the hours of work put in by similar category of employees
in other industries and no case is made out for making any change in their
hours of work.
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10.11. In connection with the item regarding the need for the development
of the banking industry including banking facilties in rural areas (item No. 20)
the Indian Banks Association has pleaded that the hours of work which may
be found appropriate for urban areas would not fit in with the environments
and the nature of work in the rural areas and has claimed that the hours of
work should be eight per day including Saturdays or 208 hours per month, on
the lines of hours prescribed by the Shops and Establishments Acts in various
States.
10.18. The demand of some of the banks for provision for recess on
Saturdays has been opposed by the workmen. A provision for lunch recess
on Saturdays would entail the workmen remaining on the premises of the
bank beyond the time when they would otherwise leave the premises of the
bank. A recess is intended primarily for the benefit of those to whom it is
granted. Workmen being opposed to a recess on Saturdays, no case has
been made out for providing the same against the wishes of the workmen.
BE
10.13. No evidence has been placed before me to show that ordinary the
present hours of work are insufficient or that the present hours of work in rural
establishments have caused such inconvenience as would warrant different
hours of work being fixed for the rural areas. I am unable to accede to the
demands of the banks in this connection.
10.12. The State Bank of India and its Subsidiaries while dealing with
item No. 21 regarding special needs of the State Bank of India and its
subsidiaries in respect of any of the preceding items (items 1 to 20 appearing
in Schedule II to the order of reference), have claimed that the present working
hours in branches and offices dealing with Government business should not
be retained and that it should be left to them to fix working hours in consultation
with the State Governments concerned.
of the supervisory staff drawing less than Rs. 500 who came to be included
within the category of workmen by reason of the Industrial Disputes
(Amendment) Act, 1956, should be more than those for members of the
clerical staff. By reason of the amendment of the definition of workmen in
the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, some persons who otherwise were not
workmen have now become workmen. Such employees do not form a distinct
class by themselves who could be easily distinguished from other members
of the clerical staff drawing a supervisory allowance under the Sastry Award,
for whom hours of work have been prescribed under the Sastry Award. In
practice it would be extremely difficult to draw a line and distinguish the one
from the other. In banks there is no standardised nomenclature for employees.
A person bearing the same nomenclature may be performing different duties
and discharging different functions in different banks. In small banks or at
branches of banks at small centres one person may be performing the
functions of several persons bearing different designations working in a large
bank or in a large city. It is not practically feasible to provide for separate
working hours for the employees under consideration and it is not necessary
to do so.
AI
10.14. The Bombay Exchange Banks Association and others have made
a claim for an increase in the hours of work of the bank employees to bring
them in line with the maximum hours of work laid down in the Shops and
Establishments Acts. No evidence has been led to show that the present
hours of work are insufficient for coping with the work ordinarily done by
banks every day. There does not appear to me to be any necessity to change
the hours of work prescribed by the Sastry Tribunal.
10.15. As regards the members of the watch and ward staff and godownkeepers their case has been fully considered by the previous Tribunals. Having
regard to the nature of the duties which they have to perform and the expense
involved in making other arrangements, it is difficult to improve upon the
provisions made with regard to them under the award of the Sastry Tribunal
as modified by the Labour Appellate Tribunals decision.
10.16. There is a claim made for reducing the hours of work for employees
working on accounting machines. The accounting machines have been
introduced by the banks to help the workmen by reducing the amount of
labour and fatigue involved in routine type of calculations. No evidence has
been led to show that the use of these machines involves such labour or the
wearing out of either the body or the mind to such an extent as would warrant
the reduction in the hours of work for them. A special allowance has been
provided for those workmen who work on these machines.. There is no case
made out for reducing their hours of work.
10.17. The banks have claimed that the hours of work for the members
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10.19. Shri H. K. Sowani, the learned advocate on behalf of the All India
State Bank of India Staff Federation, contended that duty hours not exceeding
eight hours should be fixed for drivers, domestic servants and malis, Drivers
are not exempted from the provisions of the Sastry Award regarding hours of
work unless it could be said that they are engaged in domestic service. As
regards others, the work performed by a large number of these employees is
not of a continuous nature and does not lend itself to standardisation. Their
cases have been duly considered by the previous Tribunals. In the present
state of the record before me, I cannot see my way to lay down fixed duty
hours for them.
10.20. In the result, all the provisions of the Sastry Award as modified in
connection with hours of work will remain unaltered and will be applicable to
all the banks which are before me and their workmen. The directions regarding
Ihe working hours shall be subject to the provisions of Shops and
Establishments Acts and of any other enactments in this connection
applicable to banks.
(ii) Overtime
10.21. The Sastry Tribunal by paragraph 304 of its award provided that
346
on the ground that his own mistake had necessitated overtime work he must
be given an opportunity at a suitable time to explain his lapse and to show
cause why an order depriving him of overtime should not be passed against
him.
10.25. The All India Bank Employees Association has claimed that no
employee should be called upon to work overtime for more than two hours
beyond his working hours on any working day, with the maximum of 60 hours
in a year, that overtime payment should be made at double the rates of
wages calculated on hourly basis, that Sundays and other holidays should
be excluded for the purpose of calculating hourly rate of wages, that there
should be no cushioning period to be deducted for calculating the hours of
overtime work, that no employee should be asked to work overtime on Sundays
and holidays except with his consent, that any workman, including a member
of the watch and ward staff working overtime on Sundays and holidays, should
be given a day off in the subsequent week in addition to the usual overtime
payment, and that all employees including the watch and ward staff and
godown-keepers should be allowed to enjoy all holidays under the Negotiable
Instruments Act. The All India Bank Employees Federation as also the
Vadodra Rajya Bank Nokar Sangh have demanded that the rate of overtime
should be increased, the employees should only be asked to work overtime
in case of an emergency, that overtime work should not exceed two hours on
any working day and it should not exceed 72 hours in any calendar year, that
there should be no cushioning period and no overtime work on holidays except
for half-yearly closing days, that there should be no overtime work in the
case of weekly off days and that the basis of calculation should be double
the rate of one-day wage arrived at by excluding Sundays and holidays in a
month.
AI
BE
banks could ask the workmen to do overtime work beyond the hours stated
by it in the award but subject to a maximum of 90 hours in any calendar year,
which may extend with the consent of the workmen, to 120 hours. It further
provided that normally such period of overtime work shall not exceed 2 hours
on any working day without the written consent of the workmen except in
cases falling under clause (6) of that paragraph relating to work done during
public holidays declared as such for half-yearly or yearly closing of bank
accounts and work done on other holidays. It is also laid down that for the
first half an hour of overtime work, there would be no payment, that for every
completed period of fifteen minutes work thereafter the workmen should be
paid for the first four quarter hours at the rate of 1 times the emoluments
made up of basic pay, special allowances provided for higher or special types
of work, officiating allowance and dearness allowance and that for overtime
work beyond the first four quarter hours after the initial half hour cushioning
period, they should be paid, for every quarter hour at the rate of 1 time of
the emoluments together with an additional twenty per cent for work during
such extra period. For the purpose of calculating payment for overtime work,
it was directed that each working day should be taken as a distinct unit by
itself. As regards the work done during a public holiday declared as such for
half-yearly or yearly closing of bank accounts, over time payment, if any,
was to be made only for hours of actual work exceeding 6 hours if it was a
week day or 4 hours if it was a Saturday, but for other holidays during which
overtime work was required to be done, payment was to be made for the
whole period of such work. The Sastry Tribunal excluded from the scope of
its directions relating to overtime, part-time employees as well as watch and
ward staff, bank employees engaged in domestic service, gardeners, sweepers
and godown-keepers engaged solely for that work.
10.22. The Sastry Tribunal has provided in this respect also that the
provisions of the local Shops and Establishment Acts in force in various
States which were or might be made applicable to banks, subject to such
exemptions as had been provided therein, would govern the parties before it
and that if the directions given by it came into conflict with any provisions of
such Acts or were repugnant to the same, then to the extent of such
repugnancy or inconsistency with statutory provisions and to that extent
only the directions given by it would give place to the statutory provisions.
10.24. The Labour Appellate Tribunal modified the directions of the Sastry
Award by deleting the provisions relating to the cushioning period for the
subordinate staff and by making the directions regarding overtime applicable
to cases where godown-keepers were required to remain in attendance at
the bank during office hours. The Labour Appellate Tribunal further directed
that before an order refusing to pay overtime can be passed against a workman
10.26. The employees of the State Bank of India through their various
organisations have made more or less the same demands as the All India
Bank Employees Association except that the State Bank of India Employees
Association (Bengal Circle) says that there should be no overtime and no
overtime payment and only as an exception and in very special cases and on
a few occasions in particular places where overtime cannot be avoided for
unavoidable reasons, it is in favour of conditional overtime work. The Indian
Overseas Bank Employees Union, the All India Bank of Baroda Employees
Federation, the South Gujarat Bank of Baroda Employees Union Surat, the
Allahabad Bank Employees Union, Calcutta, the Cochin Commercial Bank
Employees Association, the State Bank of Patiala (All Cadres) Employees
Association and the Employees Association of the Union Bank of Bijapur
and Sholapur have also made demands in connection with overtime payment
which are more or less similar to those made by the All India Bank Employees
Association. The few differences are that the Indian Overseas Bank
Employees Union is against any ex gratia payment in lieu of overtime work
done by an employee, the Allahabad Bank Employees Union, Calcutta does
347
348
10.23. The Sastry Tribunal directed that a workman who makes mistakes
which necessitate overtime work on his part cannot claim the benefit of payment
for such overtime work.
not object to 90 hours overtime work in a year and the State Bank of Patiala
(All Cadres) Employees Association says that the maximum hours of overtime
work should not exceed 160 hours. The Bihar Provincial Central Bank
Employees Association at Muzaffarpur, says that overtime work should be
discouraged and banks should employ sufficient hands to cope with the work
and the employees should be asked to work overtime in case of emergency
only. The Association does not want overtime work exceeding a maximum of
72 hours in a calendar year.
It is
AI
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10.27. The Indian Banks Association has stated that the ceilings in
respect of overtime work were fixed without any reliable materials on record,
that in actual practice the ceilings could not be observed in spite of the best
efforts on the part of the banks and directions were necessary for raising the
ceiling to 300 hours in a calendar year without any condition of workmans
consent and as a consequent change the daily limit of 2 hours should be
raised to 3 hours, and that restriction of three hours per day should not apply
to work done on the last day of each quarter, when the work was heavier than
on other normal working days. In connection with the calculations to be
made with regard to payment for overtime work, it has submitted that instead
of each working day being taken as a unit under clause 5 of paragraph 304 of
the Sastry Award, each week should be taken as a distinct unit. Since the
award has not in terms laid down any method by which the emoluments per
hour could be calculated, it has submitted that the rate of overtime payment
should be calculated on the basis of the number of days in a month less
Sundays. A direction is sought clarifying that public holidays declared for
half-yearly or yearly closing of bank accounts should be treated as normal
working days for all employees of the banks, whether they are connected
with the work of closing of accounts or not. It is submitted that directions
should be given to the effect that when an employee is sent on outstation
duty, he would be entitled to overtime only for actual work of the bank done
beyond the normal hours of work and the cushioning period, and that refusal
to do obligatory overtime work within the prescribed limits would be treated
as gross misconduct on the part of an employee, attracting disciplinary
action. In connection with the statement appearing in paragraph 309 of the
Sastry Award that It will not be right for the banks to allot to workmen more
work than could legitimately be done in the normal way during the prescribed
hours of work, a clarification is sought to the effect that normal work does not
necessarily mean, work done by employees regularly every day but it is
such work as is normally done by an employee in the discharge of his duties
either daily or at periodical intervals.
10.30. The Subsidiaries of the State Bank of India have made submissions
more or less on the lines of the above statement of the State Bank of India.
On behalf of the State Bank of Patiala, it has been pointed out that prior to
the coming into force of the Punjab Shops and Commercial Establishments
Act, 1958, no allowance in respect of overtime was being paid to the workmen
350
at the time of the closing of the financial year; when bills relating to grants
and other sanctioned expenditure have to be disbursed at the latest on 31st
of March of each year when taxes have to be deposited by 31st March for
inclusion in the government revenue for the particular financial year and when
remittances have to be made by taxpayers by particular dates, occasions
arise for requiring employees to work overtime. There are other occasions
when work may be required to be done overtime. The very nature of the work
is such that there is pressure of work only on certain days or at certain
times. It is a work of a sporadic nature and does not last so long as would
warrant the employment of permanent hands. On most of the occasions
when the work is being done, temporary employees cannot be employed for
the purpose of carrying out the same, or may not be readily available. The
period during which such work is required to be done is short.
and that on the coming into force of that Act, the provisions thereof were
being followed. The National Bank of Lahore has submitted that overtime
due should be conditioned upon the employee having completed his days
work, that is, the work allotted to him or such amount of work as in the
opinion of his immediate superiors is sufficient out-turn on the part of the
employee. The Bharatha Lakshmi Bank Ltd. desires that the overtime as
prescribed under the Shops and Establishments Act should be made
applicable to D Class banks. The Jaya Laxmi Bank has made the following
demands :
10.31. The Miraj State Bank is paying at present for overtime work beyond
39 hours a week at the rate of 1 times the ordinary rate of pay including
dearness allowance and desires that there should be no change in this rate.
BE
10.32. The State Bank of India and its Subsidiaries while dealing with
item No. 21 in Schedule II to the order of reference has pleaded that the
present overtime restriction should not be retained and that it should be left
to them to pay overtime for work in excess of hours of work fixed in consultation
with the Governments concerned and that the rate for overtime should be
fixed similarly. They have further claimed that the employees who are
employed as watchmen and armed guards and who are permitted to live and
sleep on the premises of the bank should not be entitled to overtime.
AI
10.33. The nature of the work in banks is such that overtime work is
required to be done. Both the Sen and the Sastry Tribunals recognised the
need of such work being done. There are various occasions when banks
require overtime work to be done. When there is a need to locate mistakes
on the very same day as, for instance, mistakes in the ledger; when an
unusually large number of applications for casual leave on a given day are
received and more than the usual number of persons take such casual leave
when there are two continuous holidays resulting in considerable accumulation
of work which needs to be disposed of on the day immediately following such
holidays; when banks have to prepare monthly balances during the last two
days of the month and the first day of the subsequent month, when on 30th
of June and 31st of December, the half yearly and yearly closing of the
accounts has to be done; when there is rush of business due to changes in
market conditions, when the work of collection or distribution of dividends on
behalf of constituents is to be done within a short period; when there is a
fresh or new capital issued or a government loan is issued and the work is to
be completed within a short period; when there is inspection of banks to be
done by the Reserve Bank of India and preparations have to be made for this
purpose; when a large amount of government business is required to be done
351
10.35. In connection with the provision in the Award of the Sastry Tribunal
that the maximum hours of overtime work should not exceed 2 hours a day
except with the written consent of the workmen, a demand has been made
for removing the ceiling or increasing the number of hours. Having carefully
considered the matter, I am of the view that normally no workman should
352
BE
10.38. A claim has been made on behalf of workmen that for doing
overtime work on Sundays and holidays they should be given a day off in the
subsequent week, in addition to the usual overtime payment. For working on
353
354
AI
10.41. The Indian Banks Association has stated that it is the contention
of some employees that the provisions of the Sastry Award in connection
with work on 30th June and 31st December were applicable only to those
employees who were connected with the work of closing of accounts and
that others who worked on those days should be paid overtime on the footing
that they have worked on holidays. It is also pointed out that there was no
half yearly closing of accounts in the State Bank of India on the 30th of June.
These two days have been declared as holidays for the facility of banks work
in connection with the half yearly and yearly closing of accounts. It has been
done with a view to closing the banks doors to the public and not with a view
to giving a holiday to the staff.These two days should be treated as normal
working days for all the employees of all banks whether they are connected
with the closing of accounts or not.
10.45. The Indian Banks Association has asked for some clarification in
connection with the time for which overtime payment is claimable by persons
who have been posted for outstation duty. It is stated that claims have been
made by such persons of the footing that barring the normal hours of work
plus the cushioning period, the rest of the time when they are away from
headquarters should be treated as constituting overtime work. When a person
355
356
BE
of the subordinate staff were to be larger than those for other workmen. This
method of calculation is advantageous to the members of the subordinate
staff. Their remuneration, however, is comparatively less. This method of
calculation seems to me on the whole to be fair and easy of application. In
view of the large measure of agreement in this connection and in view of the
desirability of having a simple method for the calculation of overtime wages,
and taking into account all the other circumstances of this case, I accept
this basis for the calculation of overtime for all banks and their workmen.
AI
10.42. A claim has also been made on behalf of the workmen that no
workman should be asked to work on Sundays or on holidays without his
consent. It is only where there is real pressure of work and the work has to be
cleared within a fixed time that banks would normally call the workmen
concerned on those days and pay them overtime at fairly high rates. I do not
think it proper to impose a further burden on banks of securing the consent of
the workmen concerned.
10.43. The Indian Banks Association has claimed that if any workman
refused to do overtime work, which he was under an obligation to do, it should
be regarded as gross misconduct. The Sastry Tribunal has defined gross
misconduct to include willful insubordination or disobedience of any lawful
and reasonable order of the management or of a superior. Apart from the
question of my jurisdiction to deal with such a demand, I see no reason to
give any special directions in connection therewith.
10.44. There is no necessity to give any directions in connection with
any other demands.
(11)
(12)
(13)
(14)
BE
(10)
AI
(9)
beyond the aforesaid hours of work prescribed for him without the
consent of the workman, subject to a maximum of 150 hours in
any calendar year. With the consent of the workman he can be
asked to do overtime work in any calendar year in excess of 150
hours.
Normally, the total period of work including overtime shall not without
the consent of the workman concerned, on any day, exceed, in the
case of workmen other than members of the subordinate staff, 9
hours inclusive of the cushioning period, and in the case of the
members of the subordinate staff, 9 hours, the period of recess
not being regarded as period of work. In the case of an emergency,
of which a responsible officer of the bank concerned shall be the
sole Judge, or when in the case of the State Bank of India and its
Subsidiaries the exigency of government work at the close of the
financial year so require a workman can be required to work without
his consent in excess of the aforesaid hours. In no case however
there should be any infringement of the provisions of any law relating
to the ceiling on the hours of work or overtime applicable to the
establishment concerned.
The 30th of June and 31st of December, when declared as such to
be holidays for half yearly and yearly closing of accounts, shall be
deemed to be normal working days for all workmen employed in all
banks.
For the first half an hour of overtime work( hereinafter called the
cushioning period) on any working day there shall be no payment
for workmen other than members of the subordinate staff. There
will be no such cushioning period for work done on Sundays and
holidays. There will be no such cushioning period for members of
the subordinate staff.
For every quarter of an hours overtime work done, which shall be
beyond any cushioning period where any such period is provided,
all workmen shall be paid at the rates hereinafter mentioned.
For the purpose of calculation of overtime, work done for less than
one full quarter of an hour shall be deemed to be work done for
quarter of an hour.
Payment in respect of overtime work done shall be made at the
rate of I times the emoluments made up of basic pay, special
allowance, if any, officiating allowance, if any, and dearness
allowance, for every quarter of an hour of overtime work done for
which payment has to be made. Payment in respect of overtime for
work done for every quarter hour beyond the first four quarter hours
which have to be paid for, shall however be at the aforesaid rate of
1 times the emoluments with an additional 20 per cent., i.e., it
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(8)
(9)
(3)
Class of Banks
BE
(2)
(5)
AI
(4)
(6)
(7)
Class of Areas
I
II
III
Rs.
Rs.
Rs.
90
60
50
B
C
75
60
50
40
40
30
30
20
15
11.1. The Sastry Tribunal has observed that a bank is directly interested
in maintaining the health of its workmen, that the banks had realised it and
that the same was evident from the commendable practice obtaining in some
of the major banks where without any obligation imposed by any award ample
medical facilities had been provided for employees.The Sastry Tribunal
expressed the view that the facilities provided by the banks could only be
limited in the nature of things. After considering the numerous demands of
the employees which, to use the language of the Sastry Tribunal, covered a
wide ground and range all the way from ordinary mixtures to specialized
treatment, from consultation to hospitalization, from change of doctors to
change of climate, and the various arguments placed before it, the Sastry
Tribunal in paragraph 450 of its award gave the following directions :
11.3. The Labour Appellate Tribunal after having duly considered all
aspects of the matter, including the medical facilities available to government
employees, has observed as follows :
With reference to the government employees the Government
occupies a double roleone as an employer, and the other as the
State having responsibility for the health of the people.
The Government has at its disposal medical services, dispensaries
and hospitals, and the Government is able to provide liberal facilities
to its employees without much extra cost.
Assuming that Government employees enjoy more liberal medical
360
(4)
(5)
BE
11.4. The Labour Appellate Tribunal has further observed that a healthy
wage structure provides for medical treatment, that the workmen could not
justly claim the entire cost of treatment, that medical aid was an amenity
which depended quite a lot on the resources of the employers and that in a
rural area, the cost of consultation was expected to be less than that in an
urban area and much less than the cost in cities and that those facts accounted
for the variation found in the Sastry Award according to the resources of the
banks and according to areas. The Labour Appellate Tribunal did not therefore
see its way to alter the figures relating to expenses on account of medical
attendance and treatment fixed by the Sastry Tribunal. It, however, laid down
that in order to ensure that the amounts which were small might be of real
assistance, the amounts should be accumulated to such figures as did not
exceed three times the amounts and that any workman who had not exhausted
the maximum amount available to him in any particular year on account of
medical assistance should be entitled to have the unexhausted portion carried
over from year to year, so that the total amount available to him at any time
did not exceed three times the maximum amount allowed to him by the
award in a year. The Sastry Award stood modified to that extent.
11.5 The Bank Award Commission in dealing with the above modification
made by the Labour Appellate Tribunal observed as follows :
AI
It came to the conclusion that the provision for accumulation of medical relief
which had been introduced by the Labour Appellate Tribunal in its decision
should be set aside. Parliament ultimately gave effect to the aforesaid
recommendation of the Bank Award Commission with the result that the
provisions of the Sastry Award in connection with medical aid and expenses
became effective without any alteration therein.
the bank should pay the entire amount of actual expenses incurred
for treatment and recovery.
Arrangement should be made with the hospital for free medical
treatment of the employees and their dependants in case of
prolonged and/or serious illness or accidents.
Banks in big cities should pool together unavailed medical fund
and out of such pooled fund, should start hospitals for the benefit of
the employees. Alternatively special beds should be reserved for
the employees in good and reputed hospitals and/or nursing homes.
Banks should, on the suggestion of employees, in different areas
or localities in every town where there are branches, appoint an
adequate number of medical practitioners practising allopathy,
homeopathy, Ayurvedic or Unani systems of medicine. Employees
should be allowed to take treatment from any Registered Medical
Practitioner dealing in Allopathy, Homeopathy and/or Ayurvedic
system of medicines.
Banks should make adequate arrangements for supply of prescribed
medicines promptly to the employees. If in case the bank is not in
a position to supply medicines, the amounts of all bills in connection
therewith should be paid to the employees direct within a weeks
time.
All bills for professional calls should be paid to the authorised
doctors direct by the bank, but where there is no such authorised
doctor the bills should be paid to the employees within a weeks
time from their submission.
Bills relating to sickness during periods when an employee is on
long leave should be paid to the employee upon scrutiny.
Spectacles, dentures, hearing aids are to be included in the aid.
The bank should create a fund of Rs. 150 per workman at the
beginning of every calendar year and the balance remaining after
payment of medical bills on this account should be utilised for
reservation of beds in good hospitals and/or nursing homes,
wherever possible.
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
11.6 On behalf of the workmen the main demands made before me were
the following:
(1) Medical facilities should be extended to the members of a workmans
family besides himself.
Medical aid benefits should be extended to the dependants of the
employees.
(2) Every workman should be granted medical aid not less than
Rs. 150 per year with a right to accumulate it upto three years In
cases of diseases like tuberculosis,cancer and such other serious
illness or accidents, requiring prolonged and expensive treatment,
11.7. The Indian Banks Association has submitted that the provisions
relating to medical aid and expenses as prescribed under the Sastry Award
should be left untouched except to the extent of the modifications sought by
it as indicated below :
361
362
(i)
BE
(ii)
AI
(iii) By clause (8) of paragraph 450 of the Sastry Award, banks have
been directed to pay expenses within six weeks of the production
of bills and certificates by the employee concerned. It is stated
that after such bills and certificates are produced, the banks have
to make their own enquiries and the banks doctors have to
scrutinise the bills and that vagueness and incompleteness of the
particulars give rise to difficulties. It is contended that the period of
six weeks from the dale of the production of the bills and certificates
was found to be inadequate and it is submitted that for making
payment of expenses properly incurred the period of six weeks
should be computed from the date the employee furnishes all bills
and certificates and information and details referred to above, that
an obligation should be placed upon the employees to -submit the
bills promptly, that the employees should be directed to submit
the medical bills and certificates within such time as may seem
reasonable to the Tribunal and that the failure to do so should be
made a valid ground for the banks to refuse payment.
(iv)
11.9. The State Bank of India, in its reply, has stated that as a gesture of
goodwill, it had permitted accumulation of monetary benefits to the extent of
a maximum of three years benefit, in spite of the fact the provision had been
struck down. I state that the aforesaid concession has largely contributed to
fraud and abuse, that the quantum fixed under the Sastry Award was very
reasonable and fair and that there was no case for an increase. It has submitted
that any direction given should make it clear that in the event of the Employees
State Insurance Scheme or similar scheme being introduced for the State
Banks employees, the directions and the present practice should cease to
be in force .
11.10. The Indian Banks Association has on behalf of the State Bank of
Patiala, stated that there was no specific provision for medical aid for the
banks employees who did not opt for the 1957 terms, but medical aid was
given in deserving cases from the staff welfare fund which at present was
being managed by a committee appointed by the State Bank of India consisting
of the General Manager of the bank, one officer and one workman.
11.11. The benefits given under the Sastry Award so far as medical aid
and expenses are concerned, are reasonable in the present circumstances.
Workmen have claimed that medical facilities should be extended to the
members of workmens family. Both the Sastry Tribunal and the Labour
Appellate Tribunal considered this matter and could not see their way to
grant this demand. It was considered that the health of the family was primarily
364
a charge on the pay and emoluments of an employee and not on the bank.
No such change in the circumstances has taken place which would warrant
the grant of this facility. This demand may be covered when the Employees
State Insurance Scheme is made applicable to the workmen in the banking
industry.
AI
BE
11.13. When a workman falls ill, the expenses which he has to incur in
connection with his illness do not depend upon the class of bank in which he
is employed. In the same area his need is the same, whether he is employed
by an A Class or a B Class or a C Class bank. If the need of the workman
was to be the sole criterion for fixing the amount of expenses to be incurred
by a bank on account of medical attendance and treatment there would be
no warrant for providing varying amounts in a descending order in the same
area, having regard to the class of bank in which the workman is employed.
The need of a workman employed in a bank falling in a lower class is in fact
greater than the need of a workman employed in a bank falling in a higher
class, as in the same area a person employed in a higher class bank would
be in receipt of a larger amount by way of emoluments than a person employed
in a lower class bank. In providing separately for expenses on account of
medical attendance and treatment the capacity of the bank has to be taken
into account. Some of the banks which will now fall in C Class under this
award will have to bear a much larger burden than banks in A and B Class by
reason of the abolition of Class D under the Sastry Award. A further burden
will have to be borne by all banks which have at present branches in Area IV
as under this award the separate classification of Area IV is being done away
with. This award further provides for an increase in the total remuneration
payable by banks and imposes an increased burden on banks under several
heads.
11.12. No evidence has been led to show that the provision made by the
Sastry Award as regards the total expenses on account of medical attendance
and treatment payable by a bank to a workman has in practice been found to
be insufficient or that a considerable number of workmen have not been able
to obtain medical relief during illness from the bank on account of the
insufficiency of the provision made by the Sastry Tribunal therefor.
11.17. It was urged that the provisions relating to medical aid and expenses
should be available not merely when a workman falls ill but also when he
meets with any accident. In order to avoid any controversy on the subject, I
direct that the provisions of this award in connection with medical aid and
expenses will extend to cases where a workman meets with an accident and
is in need of medical aid.
11.18. The workmen claim that they should be entitled at their choice to
receive treatment in accordance with the homeopathic, ayurvedic or unani
systems of medicine. No directions are given which would oblige any bank to
make any provision for such treatment. Any bank however will be at liberty, if
it so choses to allow the expenditure incurred on such treatment to be paid
out of the amount of expenses for medical attendance and treatment provided
herein.
11.19 The Sastry Award provides as under :
Wherever existing facilities in any bank or banks are superior to
the provisions hereinafter made, such facilities should be continued.
Some of the banks have claimed that the employees should collectively
make an irrevocable choice whether they will have existing facilities or those
provided by the award. The provisions of the Sastry Award have been in
operation for a long time. No outstanding dispute in this connection is pointed
out to me, and no provision in this connection is necessary.
11.20. Having considered all the demands and having considered all
aspects of the matter, no further change in the provisions relating to medical
366
aid and expenses is called for. I make an award in terms of the provisions
contained in paragraph 450 of the Sastry Award set out above with the
modifications and additions herein before mentioned. The same will apply to
all banks covered by this award.
Chapter XII
Item No. 10 :CASH DEPOSITS FIDELITY BONDS AND OTHER
SECURITIES TO BE FURNISHED BY THE STAFF
AI
BE
12.1. The Sastry Tribunal, after referring to the then existing practice
prevailing in banks, observed that the practice revealed the need felt by banks
to have some sort of security to cover financial loss that may be caused by
any fraud or negligence by embezzlement of monies by workmen engaged in
cash department and by those handling cash, valuable securities and other
possessions. It further observed that where facilities for dishonest practice
likely to involve the bank in loss exist there should be adequate safeguards
for banks. It held that on principle the need for deposits or other securities to
be provided by such staff had been made out. It laid down that only the
clerical staff in the cash department, ledger keepers and godown keepers in
charge of stocks should be called upon to give individual securities of their
own. After considering the various forms in which security may be taken, it
obeserved that the only alternatives available to the banks were that of a
cash deposit or a fidelity bond. It was unable to agree with the contention
that the cash deposit should not be insisted upon in any case. As regards
the payment of premium on a fidelity bond it could see no objection to the
workman being asked to bear burden where he did not find it convenient to
make a cash deposit for reasons of his own. It observed that if deposit or
security in some form or other was incidental to that kind of employment in
the bank it was not unjust or improper that the incidental burden of expenses
in connection with it should fall upon the employee. It did not accept the
contention urged on behalf of the workmen that premium should necessarily
be borne by the banks in such cases. It further observed that the amounts,
for which such security may be taken, would naturally vary with the kind of
work that was allotted to the various categories of workmen. The Sastry
Tribunal did not lay down any directions under this head and made a general
observation that as a general rule the banks should not fix very high amounts
but should as far as possible take such minimum amount only as was proper
in each case. It further directed that where security was required to be given,
failure to furnish the necessary security should ordinarily operate as a bar to
confirmation, unless the management otherwise directed for special reasons
and that where the workman was not able to give the necessary security, the
banks should, if possible, transfer him to a post in which no security need be
furnished and in such an event his confirmation, if otherwise warranted should
not be withheld or postponed.
12.2 The Labour Appellate Tribunal in dealing with the provisions of the
Sastry Award has observed that the Sastry Award merely determined three
classes of employees from whom alone, to the exclusion of others, security
may be asked for. The Labour Appelate Tribunal directed that in cases where
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368
individual security had been taken from employees other than employees
belonging to the aforesaid three categories specified by the Sastry Tribunal,
the security bonds would be deemed to be cancelled and the banks would
refund the unutilised portion of the security, and where the security was in
cash together with simple interest thereon at 4 per cent per annum from 1st
April 1954.
12.8. The Northern India Banks Association has stated that the
arrangement provided under the Sastry Award was fair and equitable and
should be continued.
BE
12.7. The Miraj State Bank Limited has stated that the bank has a
system of taking security deposits from clerks including cashiers and other
employees of the bank including members of the supervisory staff, that the
usual practice is that a security deposit not exceeding Rs. 1,000 is taken
from a clerk or cashier by very easy monthly instalments of Rs. 5 or Rs. 10
according to the stage in the scales of pay at which a workman might arrived
and that having regard to the method of taking security deposits and having
regard to the nature of the work that workmen in the employment of the bank
have to perform it was essential that the bank should be permitted to take
such security deposits as it might consider proper in the circumstances of
each case.
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12.4. The Indian Banks Association has submitted that the provisions
made in Chapter XXI of the Sastry Award in this connection have worked
satisfactorily and that they should be continued.
12.5. The Bombay Exchange Banks Association has stated that bearing
in mind the nature of banking business, the demand was totally unjustified
and unreasonable. It claimed that the demands related to matters concerning
the functions of management and should not form the subject of adjudication,
that if the bank decided that in all cases or in some a cash deposit, fidelity
bond, and/or other security was desirable it became a contract of service. It
pleaded that it was unreasonable that the bank should be required to pay any
premium of fidelity insurance taken out by or for an employee. It further stated
that the existing practices were salutary and of long standing and should not
be abolished or interfered with bearing in mind the nature of banking business.
12.6. The State Bank of India has stated that the system of furnishing
cash security by cashiers arose out of the nature of the duties the employees
were expected to carry out and was in conformity with the practice in the
banking industry, that the head cashier was part of the administrative structure
of the bank and the head cashier was responsible to the bank for all acts of
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12.9. The State Bank of Patiala has pleaded that now that the bank was
a subsidiary of the State Bank of India and was required to handle government
business and government treasure the bank would perforce have to call upon
the assistant cashiers and head cashier to furnish more cash securities and
the position would have to be reviewed from time to time and that the bank
should be vested with discretion to decide whether an employee should furnish
security and the extent and nature of such security. It adopted the written
statement filed by the Indian Banks Association on behalf of its other members
on this issue.
12.10. The Sastry Tribunal has dealt with the necessity of the banks
taking some sort of security to cover financial loss that may be caused by
any fraud or negligence or by embezzlement of monies by workmen engaged
in the cash department and by those handling cash, valuable securities and
other possessions. No case has been made out for the abolition of the system
of taking cash deposits, fidelity bonds or other forms of security as a condition
of employment for the categories of employees stated in the Sastry Award
from whom the same could be taken. The Sastry Tribunal has also dealt with
the claim about the premium in connection with fidelity bonds being borne by
the bank. I agree with the observations made by the Sastry Tribunal in this
connection. No case has been made out for directing any bank to pay the
premia in connection therewith.
12.11. I accordingly direct that a bank will be at liberty to demand security
from (i) workmen employed in the cash department other than members of
the subordinate staff, (ii) ledger-keepers and (iii) godown-keepers in charge
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12.12. In connection with the claim made that all existing cash deposits
or securities should be returned with interest to the employees concerned,
the Labour Appellate Tribunal in connection with a similar demand had given
a direction that where individual security had been taken from employees
other than the employees belonging to the three categories specified by the
Sastry Tribunal, the security bond would be deemed to be cancelled and the
banks should refund the unutilised portion of the security. It also directed the
return of the security in cash together with interest. There are some banks
before me which were not parties to the proceedings before the Sastry Tribunal.
I direct that where any bank has taken security from workmen other than
those from whom they are entitled to take security under this award, the
security bonds should be cancelled and where the security consists of cash,
the banks should refund the unutilised portion of the security within four
months from the date of the coming into force of this award. In the event of
such refund not being made within the time aforesaid, the banks will be liable
to pay interest to the persons concerned at the rate of four per cent per
annum on the amount directed to be refunded from the date of the expiry of
the aforesaid period of four months till the date of payment.
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year. It has claimed that in cold areas warm overcoat should also be supplied
to watchmen every two years and that employees on outdoor duty should
also be supplied with rain coats. By its supplementary statement of claim,
the Federation has claimed that every member of the subordinate staff should
be supplied with an umbrella during the monsoon every year. The Federation
has also submitted that the practice of supplying three sets of uniforms to
subordinate staff members who do outdoor work should be continued.
CHAPTER XIII
Item No. 11 : UNIFORMS AND LIVERIES
13.1. The dispute in connection with this item was not the subject matter
of adjudication by the Sastry Tribunal.
13.2. The All India Bank Employees Association has claimed that all
members of the subordinate staff should be supplied with two full sets of
summer uniforms every year and one set of winter uniform every alternate
year, that the uniform should include a pair of shoes and four pairs of socks
every year, that in cold areas, warm overcoats should also be provided to
watchmen after every two years and that the employees on out-door duties
should also be supplied with rain-coats.
BE
13.3. The All India Bank Employees Federation and the Vadodra Rajya
Bank Nokar Sangh have stated that though generally uniforms are supplied
to the subordinate staff of banks, definite rules should be laid down in
connection therewith. They demand three sets of uniforms each consisting
of coat, pair of pants or dhoties, one shirt, one cap or turban, pair of socks,
one pair of sandles or shoes. For winter they demand warm clothing and for
the monsoon monsoon equipment such as rain coat, umbrella and gumboot every year. They have demanded that the employees on night duty
should be supplied with over-coats and blankets.
13.7. The Indian Overseas Bank Employees Union has made a demand
similar to the demand made by the All India Bank Employees Association,
except that it has demanded that umbrellas should also be supplied.
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13.4. The All India State Bank of India Staff Federation and the State
Bank of India Staff Union, Andhra Pradesh, have demanded for all members
of the subordinate staff, four full sets of summer uniforms every year and one
set of winter uniform every alternate year. They have claimed that the uniform
should include a pair of shoes and four pairs of socks every year and that in
cold areas a warm over coat should also be provided to every watchman after
every two years, and employees on out-door duty should be supplied with
rain -coat.
13.11. The State Bank of Patiala has stated that apart from what it was
already providing, no further directions were called for. It has further stated
that it was supplying cold weather uniforms every three years, same in the
case of those with service of less than one year, and two hot weather uniforms
every alternate year, same in the case of those with service of less than three
months, to Jamadars, gunretainers, peons, record-lifters, daftries, sweepers,
drivers, gardeners and kahar working at the head office.
13.12. The Bharatha Lakshmi Bank Limited has submitted that it would
be enough if two sets of uniforms made of cotton were supplied to members
of the subordinate staff.
13.13. The Miraj State Bank has stated that according to the present
practicethe bank supplied to its sepoys and peons Khaki uniforms
consisting of a coat and a pant, that the number of sets of uniforms to be
supplied was not determined and that uniforms were supplied from time to
time when it became necessary to do so. It has further stated that umbrellas
were being supplied as and when necessary.
13.6. The All India Bank of Baroda Employees Federation has claimed
that all members of the subordinate staff should be supplied with two full sets
of summer uniform every year and one set of winter uniform every alternate
year, the uniform to include a pair of shoes and four pairs of socks every
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unreasonable.
13.15. The Northern India Banks Association has pleaded that the banks
are already providing uniforms to the subordinate staff to ensure efficiency
and cleanliness and felt that there was hardly any need for a provision on this
point and that the arrangements already in existence should continue.
(ii)
CHAPTER XIV
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14.2. The All India State Bank of India Staff Federation in its statement
of claim as originally filed on 20th September 1960 had demanded that in
respect of subordinate staff a seniority list should be prepared and maintained
strictly in terms of the length of service on town-wise basis for the purpose of
promotions within the subordinate cadre and in respect of clerks and cashiers
the same should be prepared and maintained on State-wise basis. On 23rd
August 1961 it applied for an amendment in terms following :
In respect of subordinate staff such list should be prepared and
maintained strictly in terms of length of service on branch-wise
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376
14.6. The State Bank of India has contended that it maintains branch
wise seniority lists, that those were adequate and that no case was made
out for maintaining seniority lists on any other basis.
This amendment has been granted and demand of the aforesaid Federation
which requires consideration is the revised demand.
14.7. On behalf of the State Bank of Patiala it is stated that the bank
was maintaining a seniority list of employees in all cadres. The bank, however,
stated that this demand was intimately linked up with promotion policy which
was a management function.
14.9. Item No. 12 relates merely to the need for maintenance of seniority
lists. Under this head the question relating to the conditions under which
promotions should be granted cannot be agitated.
14.10. Seniority lists are required to be maintained generally for the
purpose of retrenchment and promotion. As regards retrenchment, section
25 G of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, provides that where any workman
in an industrial establishment, who is a citizen of India, is to be retrenched
and he belongs to a particular category of workmen in that establishment, in
the absence of any agreement between the employer and the workman in
this behalf, the employer shall ordinarily retrench the workman who was the
last person to be employed in that category, unless for reasons to be recorded
the employer retrenches any other workman. Rule 77 of the Industrial Disputes
(Central) Rules, 1957, provides as under :
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14.4. The Indian Banks Association has submitted that the item relating
to the need for maintenance of seniority lists does not relate to an industrial
dispute and that this Tribunal has no jurisdiction to adjudicate upon the same.
It has further submitted that the question of seniority list arises when
considering promotions and termination of employment in case general
retrenchment takes place in an establishment. It states that as regards
promotions all Tribunals have recognised that there could be no hard and fast
rules and that the ultimate decision must rest with the management, and
that it was apparent that by an indirect method the employees wanted the
question of promotion to be regulated by hidebound rules. It further says that
in case of retrenchment, section 25G of the Industrial Disputes Act had
made ample provisions to protect the interests of the employees by recognising
the principle of last come first go and that the Industrial Disputes (Central)
Rules, 1957, dealt with minor details connected with retrenchment and
according to Rule 77 of the said Rules an employer has prepared a list of
workmen from which retrenchment is contemplated, arranged according to
the seniority of service and cause a copy thereof to be posted on the notice
board at least seven days before the actual date of retrenchment. It submits
that in view of this statutory requirement, no directions are either necessary
or called for. It further submits that no employee either in the clerical grade or
belonging to the subordinate staff can claim promotion as a matter of right
and that in the matter of recruitment the management has always been and
has to be given a free hand and the employees cannot claim to dictate to the
employers as to how any particular vacancy was to be filled in.
14.8. The Miraj State Bank has stated that the bank so far had not come
across any problems arising out of this question and submitted that there
was no need to make any elaborate provision as far as the question of seniority
and promotions was concerned.
14.5. The Bombay Exchange Banks Association has stated that the
question of promotion was one which was essentially a management function
depending as it did on the managements assessment of an employees
merit and suitability for promotion and that if any directions were made calling
for maintenance of seniority lists, it would lead to disputes and would affect
the smooth running of business. It further states that under the scheme of
the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, the emphasis was on an industrial
377
the provisions of the Sastry Award. In paragraph 529 of the Sastry Award it is
stated as follows :
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We do not think that any hard and fast rules can be laid down
inconnection with promotions. We are definitely opposed to the
suggestion that employees unions should be consulted in
connection with promotions. It cannot be supported on principle.
We do not think that such consultation is likely to be helpful either.
While there is no doubt that seniority in service should be one of
the most important factors to be taken into account for the purpose,
we are unable to agree that mere length of service alone irrespective
of efficiency, educational qualifications, character and nature of
responsibility required in connection with the vacancies to be filled
in should be the sole or even the main criterion for promation.
Promation is certainly not a matter which could be made automatic
and a great deal of discretion by its very nature must rest with the
management in this connection. It is not only difficult but very
undesirable to lay down any one single principle for the exercise of
this discretion. In our opinion there must be cases of employees in
the banking industry, as elsewhere in which efficiency of some
employees does not necessarily improve with mere length of service.
Nor do all employees in all cases show capacity for work involving
higher responsibilities. The apprehension of the employees
underlying the demand for length of service to be the sole governing
factor for promotion may be due to apprehensions of nepotism and
victimization of employees who take active interest in the trade
union movement. No substantial proof in support of this apprehension
has been laid before us and such cases, if any, can only be dealt
with in other ways or as provided by law. We however, direct that
even when direct recruitment to particular posts is decided on,
deserving men already in service who come up to the required
educational qualifications should also be enable to compete for
such recruitment by a reasonable relaxation of the rules relating to
age and other restrictions if any. We further direct that in the case
of employees who are not found fit for promotion the decision should
be borne out by service records of the employees, and that when a
person senior in service is superseded it should be for good and
cogent reasons. We recommend that such an employee should
have the right to appeal to the General Manager or the Managing
Director who should consider the appeal with an open mind and
revise the decision if necessary, and that such appeal should not
be treated as an act of indiscipline on the part of the employee by
the officers under whom he may be working.
These provisions however do not govern all banks appearing before me.
The question relating to the policy regarding transfers does not arise for
determination by me. At present there are no hard and fast rules in connection
with promotions. I cannot in this reference lay down whether for the purpose
of promotions, employees should be considered establishment-wise, areawise, circle-wise state-wise or in the country as a whole. A seniority list to be
useful must be co-related to the totality of persons from whom a choice is to
be made for the purpose of promotions. It is not possible for me to direct any
list to be prepared on any particular basis which would be of practical use.
Under the circumstances, having regard to the limited scope of the Reference,
though I recognise the need for the maintenance of seniority lists, I am unable
to give any directions making it obligatory on the banks to maintain seniority
lists on any particular basis. I may in passing, observe that having regard to
the limited scope of the reference, this matter has not been fully dealt with
before me.
380
any change.
CHAPTER XV
15.6. The Miraj State Bank Limited has submitted that the bank was
governed by the provisions of the standing orders as settled by the
Commissioner of Labour, that the standing orders of the bank including the
clause relating to retirement were framed by the Commissioner of Labour on
securing the agreement of the bank as well as the representative Union of its
workmen and therefore, no change in the present rule relating to the age of
retirement was called for.
15.8. The Jaya Lakshmi Bank Limited, in reply has stated as under :
Age of retirement shall be on completion of 55 years. It is observed
that after the age of 55 the efficiency of the workman is impaired.
15.9. The Supreme Court, in the case of Guest Keen Williams (Private)
Ltd. vs. Sterling (P.J.) and others, reported in 1959 (II) Labour Law Journal,
page 405, in the course of its judgment, has observed that in fixing the age of
superannuation Industrial Tribunals have to take into account several relevant
factors. The factors enumerated by it are the following :-what is the nature
of the work assigned to the employees in the course of their employment ?
What is the nature of the wage structure paid to them ? What are the retirement
benefits and other amenities available to them ? What is the character of the
climate where the employees work and what is the age of superannuation
fixed in comparable industries in the same region ? What is generally the
practice prevailing in the industry in the past in the matter of retiring its
employees ? The Supreme Court has laid down that these and other relevant
facts have to be weighed by the Tribunal in every case when it is called upon
to fix an age of superannuation in an industrial dispute. In the case of Imperial
Chemical Industries (India) (Private) Ltd., Bombay and its workmen, reported
in 1960 (II) Labour Law Journal, page 716, the Supreme Court has observed
that in fixing the age of retirement no hard and fast rule could be laid down
and that the decision on the question would always depend on a proper
assessment of relevant factors and might conceivably vary from case to case.
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15.2. The All India Bank Employees Association has claimed that for all
categories of employees, the age of retirement should be fixed at 60. A
similar demand has been made by the All India Bank Employees Federation,
the All India State Bank of India Staff Federation and other Associations and
Unions of workmen. The Indian Overseas Bank Employees Union has claimed
that the retirement age should be 55 and if the employee so desired, extension
should be granted upto a maximum period of 3 years. The State Bank of
India Employees' Association (Bengal Circle) has pleaded that the age for
compulsory retirement should be 58 years and an employee should, at his
option, be entitled to retire after 20 years of service. The Employees
Association of Union Bank of Bijapur and Sholapur has claimed that for all
categories of employees the age of retirement should be fixed at 60 and that
an employee may have an option to retire after his age of 55.
15.7. The Bharatha Lakshmi Bank Limited has submitted that the age of
retirement may be fixed at 55 years with option to banks to extend it by not
more than 5 years.
AI
15.3. The Indian Banks Association has opposed the demand and has
stated that the present demand of the employees runs counter to the demand
made on behalf of the employees before the Sastry Tribunal. Before the
Sastry Ttibunal the All India Bank Employees Association had contended
that all employees should be compulsorily retired on the completion of 30
years of service or 55 years of age, whichever was earlier, whilst the Imperial
Bank Staff Association had suggested that no workman should be retired
unless he completed 58 years of age. The Bombay Exchange Banks
Association, in reply, submitted that the question about the age of retirement
would have to be decided by the Tribunal in the light of the principles laid
down by the Supreme Court in the cast of Guest Keen Williams Private
Limited vs. Sterling (P.J.) and others reported in 1959 (II) Labour Law Journal,
page 405. It submitted that on an application of those principles to banks and
especially in view of the existence of pension schemes in several banks,
there was no case for an increase in the retirement age.
15.4. The State Bank of India has stated that the age of retirement in the
State Bank, as prescribed by the Sastry Tribunal, was 58 years and that the
demand that an employee should be entitled to retire, after 20 years service
was not reasonable.
15.5. On behalf of the State Bank of Patiala, it has been stated that the
present age of retirement was 55 years and that there was no justification for
381
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CHAPTER XVI
15.11. On the other hand, it was contended on behalf of the banks that
the directions given by the Sastry Tribunal had not been found to be unduly
harsh or improper, that there should be no alteration in the age of retirement
as that would directly affect the pension, and that all that had been pointed
out by the other side was that in several concerns in Bombay the age of
retirement was 60. It was argued on behalf of the State Bank of India that
there would be additional burden on the State Bank if the age of retirement
was extended by two years, that there would be difficulty in giving promotions,
that there was a fair pension scheme obtaining in the State Bank, that the
Supreme Court had observed in the case of the Imperial Chemical Industries
(India) (Private) Ltd., Bombay reported in 1960 (II) Labour Law Journal, page
716 that a fair and reasonable pension scheme played an important part in
fixing the age of retirement at a comparatively earlier stage that the bank
today recruited employees on the basis that some will retire in a particular
year at the age of 58 and that if the retirement age was raised, this programme
would be upset.
383
16.4. The Indian Banks Association has submitted that according to the
definition of workmen given in section 2(s) of the Industrial Disputes Act
1947, a person employed mainly in a managerial or administrative capacity
or in a supervisory capacity drawing wages exceeding Rs. 500 per month,
was not a workman, that the Tribunal would have no jurisdiction to lay down
emoluments for such employees beyond Rs. 500 per month, that the Tribunal
should give option from the date the award comes into force to such employees
in supervisory grade either to opt for the totality of the benefits under the
award to be given by the Tribunal or to opt for such terms and conditions as
might be available under the contract between the employees concerned and
the bank, and that such option should be made available to employee in the
supervisory grade now employed, or those who might enter such grade after
the publication of the award of the Tribunal. The demand of the workmen that
384
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Bank did not have any occasion to employ any part-time workmen the question
of making the provisions of the award applicable to part-time employees, so
far as the Miraj State Bank is concerned, did not arise. The Jaya Laxmi Bank
has submitted that the award of this Tribunal should be made applicable to
confirmed clerical staff and subordinate staff and that it should not be made
applicable to officers (managers, assistant managers, agents, assistant
agents, accountants, supervisory staff) part-time workers, probationers,
apprentices and temporary appointments. The Bharata Lakshmi Bank has
submitted that the award should be made applicable to clerks and the
subordinate staff only.
16.6. The State Bank of India has submitted that the award of this Tribunal
should not apply to persons who are attached whole-time to bungalows and
staff quarters, to part-time employees, casual and temporary employees and
jobs workers. It is further submitted that the award should also not apply to
clerks-in-charge of the banks treasury pay offices and sub-pay offices,
assuming that they were held to be workmen. Similar submission is made
on behalf of subsidiaries of the State Bank of India. The Miraj State Bank has
submitted that having regard to the peculiar character of the banking industry
and the nature of the banking business, application of the provisions of the
award should be restricted only to permanent workmen and probationers in
the employment of the bank excluding supervisory staff who may technically
be workmen within the definition of the term and that the provisions of the
award should also not be made applicable to temporary workmen, part-time
workmen and apprentices. The bank further submits that the application of
the provisions of the award to a temporary employee would be anomalous
and can create an embarrassing situation, that the provisions of the award
should not be made applicable to the apprentices and that as the Miraj State
385
CHAPTER XVII
Item No. 15 SUBSISTENCE ALLOWANCE DURING PERIOD OF
SUSPENSION
.17.1. By paragraph 557 of its award the Sastry Tribunal directed that
subsistence allowance during the period of suspension should be granted to
an employee on the following scales :
(1) For the first three months one-third of the pay and allowances which
the workman would have got but for the suspension;
(2) Thereafter, (i) where the enquiry is departmental by the bank, onehalf of the pay and allowances for the succeeding months;
It appeared to the Sastry Tribunal that whatever might be the legal position
under the ordinary law, some allowance should be given to workmen under
suspension as they should not be left to starve during the period of suspension.
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17.2. The Labour Appellate Tribunal, after considering the matter, did
not make any change in the aforesaid general provisions. In connection with
the Imperial Bank of India it observed that the workmen of the Bengal Circle
were in fact paid full salary and allowances for the period of suspension and
that out of 11,000 and odd employees of the said bank, 7000 employees
were in the Bengal Circle. It gave its decision in connection with the employees,
of the Imperial Bank in terms following: We do not propose to lay down
any general principle; but on the special facts here, when the benefit has
been extended to the majority of the workmen, we consider it right to direct
that the same benefit shall be made available to the workmen of the other
circles. We direct accordingly.
17.3. On behalf of the workmen, the following claims were made :
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388
suspension may depend upon various circumstances affecting the time taken
in connection with an enquiry by the bank or by an outside agency. Under
the law of contract, when an employee is suspended, the contract of
employment itself is under suspension. It is only with a view to prevent great
hardship upon the employees that Tribunals have made provision for the
grant of subsistence allowance during the period of suspension which, under
the law of contract, they would otherwise not have obtained.
17.7. The Bombay Exchange Banks Association has claimed that any
subsistence allowance in the case of employees who are prosecuted in criminal
court should entirely cease after a period of six months from the date of
suspension.
17.13. The State Bank of India is at present giving full salary and
allowances during the period of suspension. There is no reason for treating
the State Bank of India or any particular bank differently from other banks in
an all-India adjudication.
17.14. I make an award in connection with this item in terms similar to
those contained in paragraph 557 of the Sastry Award quoted above.
17.15. The State Bank of India and other banks will be free to give such
salary and allowances as they deem fit to a workman during the period of
suspension so long as the amount of such salary and allowances is at a rate
not less than what is provided under this award and I direct accordingly.
BE
17.8. The State Bank of India has stated that the demands made were
unreasonable and unjustified, that as a matter of fact, due to the practice
followed by the Imperial Bank of India, under the circumstances then existing
of providing for payment of full pay during suspension, the State Bank had
been required to grant full pay during the period of suspension which was
absolutely unreasonable and unsustainable on principle. The State Bank
submitted that the Tribunal should direct the State Bank to pay the same
rate of subsistence allowance which the Tribunal prescribes for other banks
and should further direct that if an employee was suspended because of
criminal prosecution, payment of subsistence allowance should cease six
months after the date of suspension and that an employee who was
prosecuted for an offence, not connected with the banks work and was
suspended by the bank should not be granted any subsistence allowance.
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17.9. The State Bank of Patiala has stated that a workman under
suspension being paid by the bank subsistence allowance at the rate of half
the employees substantive pay plus dearness allowance. It adopted the
written statement filed by the Indian Banks Association on behalf of its member
banks on this issue.
17.10. I have to deal under this item with the question of subsistence
allowance during period of suspension.Demands have been made under this
item that a person should not ordinarily be suspended or should be suspended
only when he is involved in an offence for which he was liable to be convicted
and sentenced under the ordinary criminal law. These demands cannot strictly
speaking be said to be covered by this item.Apart from any other consideration,
in my view, there is no merit in this demand. There is no reason why a bank
should not be in a position to suspend a workman who is charged with gross
misconduct not amounting to an offence under the ordinary criminal law.
17.11. As regards the demand for limiting the period of suspension and
for placing a limit on the time during which subsistence allowance should be
paid, no hard and fast rule can be laid down. It may happen that in some
cases, the period of suspension is fairly long. The duration of the period of
389
390
18.6. The All India Bank Employees Federation has made the following
demands :
CHAPTER XVIII
Item No. 16 PROCEDURE FOR TERMINATION OF EMPLOYMENT
(i)
(ii)
Misconduct
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Disciplinary Action
Clauses (a) to (d) set out the activities and/or behaviour which should
not be considered as misconduct.
18.2. A similar demand has been made by the All India State Bank of
India Staff Federation and the State Bank of India Staff Union, Andhra Pradesh.
(e)
(f)
(g)
(h)
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(j)
(k)
18.11. The Northern India Banks Association has claimed that a specific
power of discharge should vest in the management,
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18.7. In making its demands the Vadodra Rajya Bank Nokar Sangh has
followed the same pattern as the All India Bank Employees Federation with
some variations. It has claimed that the services of an employee should not
be terminated except when he is involved in an offence meriting dismissal or
when there is a case for bona fide retrenchment. It has claimed that certain
further acts should not constitute misconduct. It has further claimed that
after the employees are held innocent by the enquiry officer and reinstated
they should be paid full salary of the suspension period and this should not
be left at the discretion of the management.
18.10. The State Bank of India has opposed the demands of the workmen
for constitution of joint committees. It has submitted that paragraph 521 of
the Sastry Award should be replaced by a set of rules similar to those contained
in Model Standing Orders framed by the Central Government under the
Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Act, 1946, with suitable Additions
to the list of acts of misconduct to bring in features special to the banking
industry.
(i)
18 .8. The Indian Banks Association has submitted that the provisions
contained in paragraph 522(1) of the Sastry Award relating to procedure for
termination of employment and disciplinary action do not require any
substantial alteration. It has sought certain modifications therein stating that
the procedure was found to be cumbrous and tending to delay the disposal of
cases requiring prompt action. It has submitted that this Tribunal should
direct that the granting of adjournment or adjournments of hearing in connection
with disciplinary proceedings should be discretionary with the management,
that such adjournments should not be for more than seven days in the
aggregate during the entire course of proceedings on applications of an
employee and that an employee against whom disciplinary proceedings are
being taken may be represented by any colleague in the same department
and not by a union representative. It has sought the inclusion of twenty-three
more items in the list of acts and omissions set out in paragraph 521(4) of
the Sastry Award as constituting gross misconduct, and he has asked for
the inclusion of eight further items as constituing minor misconduct, in the
393
18.12. The Indian Overseas Bank Ltd., has in its written statement stated
as follows :
The provisions of the Sastry Award in this behalf in toto should be
allowed to continue in force as we find in actual practice that the
provisions do really safeguard the interests of the workmen in full
measure and that there should not be any variation thereto.
18.13. Other banks have opposed some of the demands of the workmen.
see my way, whatever may be the merit of the claims, to entertain the
demands made by some of the banks and workmens organisations in this
connection.
representatives of the union and the management and the demand that no
action against an employee should be taken without proper consideration by
such a committee, I am unable to accede to the same in the circumstances
prevailing at present in the banking industry or in the country as a whole. It is
not necessary to interfere with the right of the management to take disciplinary
action in the banking industry.
The procedure laid down in the Sastry Award in connection with taking
disciplinary action will be found along with other matters in paragraphs 520
and 521. The said paragraphs provide as under :
AI
BE
18.18. As regards the claim by the All India Bank of Baroda Employees
Federation that services of an employee should not be terminated unless he
was punished by a court of law on a charge of moral turpitude, apart from
any other consideration, there is no merit in the demand. A workman may be
guilty of gross misconduct even without committing an offence punishable in
a court of law. Moral turpitude is not of the essence of such misconduct in
connection with bank employees. There is no reason why the banks should
be under an obligation to retain in service persons who are guilty of gross
misconduct even though they may not have committed an offence involving
moral turpitude.
18.19. As regards the demand for constituting a committee of
395
(1)
(2)
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
AI
BE
(3)
(4)
(b)
(c)
(d)
e)
(f)
(5)
(6)
(g)
(h)
(i)
(j)
k)
(l)
(b)
(c)
be fined; or
(d)
(e)
(b)
(8)
(e)
(f)
(h)
(i)
(j)
(k)
(l)
BE
(g)
(b)
(c)
be warned or censured ; or
(b)
(c)
have his increment stopped for a period not longer than six
months.
In all cases in which action under paragraphs (3), (5) or (7) may be
taken, the proceedings held shall be entered in a book kept specially
for the purpose, in which the date on which the proceedings are
held, the name of the employee proceeded against, the charge or
charges, the evidence on which they are based, the explanation
and the evidence, if any, tendered, by the said employee, the finding
or findings with the grounds on which they are based and the order
passed shall be recorded with sufficient fullness, as clearly as
possible, and such record of the proceedings shall be signed by
399
(d)
AI
(7)
(c)
400
(11) Where the directions given above conflict with the procedure or
rules, in force in any bank regarding disciplinary action they shall
prevail over the latter. There may, in such procedure or rules exist
certain provisions outside the scope of the directions given by us
above enabling the bank to dismiss, warn, censure, fine an employee
or have his increment stopped or have an adverse remark entered
against him. In all such cases also we think that the provisions set
out in clauses (8) and (9) should apply, and we direct accordingly.
18.24. It was pointed out to me that it may some times happen that an
employee on whom a notice, order, charge-sheet, communication or intimation
in connection with disciplinary proceedings when it is sought to be served
declines to receive the same and proceedings are some times held up by
reason thereof. It is necessary to provide for such a situation. I direct that if a
workman refuses to accept any notice, order, charge-sheet, written
communication or written intimation in connection with disciplinary proceeding
when it is sought to be served upon him, such refusal shall be deemed to be
a good service upon him, provided such refusal takes place on the presence
of at least two persons including the person who goes to effect service upon
him. Where such notice, order, charge-sheet, communication or intimation
is sent by registered post with acknowledgement due, the same shall, at the
discretion of the officer of the bank concerned, be deemed to have been duly
served upon the workman, if the same has been refused by the workman.
BE
alteration. The workmen have, by and large, claimed its retention. There
does not appear to me to be any case for making any substantial changes in
the procedure so laid down.
18.21. Paragraphs 518 and 519 of the Sastry Award provide Inter alia as
under :
AI
18.22. The Sastry Tribunal has, after careful consideration, made detailed
provisions relating to the procedure for taking disciplinary action. It was urged
at the hearing that the enquiry before a domestic Tribunal should be as simple
as possible consistent with the observance of the principles of natural justice.
As a general proposition, that statement has considerable force. Where,
however, detailed provisions have been laid down and parties have been following
such procedure for a number of years, it does not seem to me to be right to
scrap the procedure has led to gross abuse or has defeated the purpose for
which it was laid down. There is no such evidence led before me. As a matter
of fact, the Indian Banks Association has submitted that the provisions relating
to procedure for taking disciplinary action do not require any substantial
401
the same procedure as the one laid down by the Sastry Tribunal for termination
of employment and taking other disciplinary action in paragraphs 520 and
521 and in paragraphs 518 and 519 to the extent quoted above subject to the
modifications indicated above as regards banks governed by this award.
CHAPTER XIX.
Item No. 17. DATE OF EFFECT OF THE NEW AWARD AND OPTION, IF
ANY, TO BE GIVEN TO THE
EXISTING EMPLOYEES TO RETAIN THEIR PRESENT TERMS AND
CONDITIONS OF SERVICE.
AI
BE
19.1. The All India Bank Employees Association has submitted that the
new award should apply to all categories of workmen with effect from 1st
April, 1959. It has further submitted that the right of option should only be
given in respect of pay-scales, dearness allowance and house rent and
compensatory local allowance, taken together and that the date of option
should also be from 1st April 1959".It has submitted that in no case,existing
rights and privileges of the employees should be curtailed in any manner.The
only demand made by the All India Bank Employees Federation and by the
Vadodra Rajya Bank Nokar Sangh, under this head is that in no case and at
no stage the existing rights, benefits and privileges of the employees should
be adversely affected by the new award. The All India State Bank of India
Staff Federation and the State Bank of India staff Union, Andhra Pradesh,
have made demands similar to those of the All India Bank Employees
Association, save and except that they have not expressly raised any plea
about the date of option being from 1st April 1959. The State Bank of India
Employees Association, Bengal Circle, has pleaded that the award should
be given effect to from 1st April 1959. It has further demanded that the
present employees will have the option to continue under the existing
conditions or to adopt the award that may be given herein. The Bank of
Baroda Employees Federation has submitted that the award should apply to
all categories of workmen with effect from 1st April 1959, and that the date of
option, if any, should also be from 1st April 1959. The only demand made
under this head by the Indian Overseas Bank Employees Union, Madras is
that the award should have retrospective effect from 1st April 1959.
403
AI
BE
19.3. The Indian Banks Association has submitted that the appropriate
date for the new award to come into operation should be the date on which
such award becomes enforceable under the law and that there is no scope
for giving retrospective effect thereto. The Bombay Exchange Banks
Association has submitted that no question arises of giving retrospective
effect to the new award as unless a specific demand for a specific date on
which the award should be effective was referred to the Tribunal, the Tribunal
had no jurisdiction to direct that the award should come into effect
retrospectively, and that the Tribunal had also no jurisdiction in terms of
section 10 (4) of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, to direct the award
becoming effective retrospectively. It is further submitted that having regard
to the well- established principles of industrial law on the subject of giving
retrospective effect, there was no case for giving any retrospective effect to
the new award and that the Supreme Court had laid down that if the demands
made were so excessive that no employer could reasonably be expected to
concede the same, it would be wrong to give retrospective effect from the
date of the presentation of the demands, and that the said rule was fully
applicable to the present case. It has further submitted that no option should
be given to the existing employees on any of the matters referred to the
Tribunal as it was contrary to principle to make the banks maintain two sets
of service conditions simultaneously, that the workmen having made demands
must abide by the decision on those demands. The State Bank of India has
also taken more or less a similar stand. The Indian Banks Association, on
behalf of the State Bank of Patiala, has submitted, that the bank has never
been subjected to any award, that the new award should not be made
applicable retrospectively and that the bank has no objection to the present
employees being given the option to retain their present pay, dearness
allowance and other allowances and benefits in their totality. It has also
submitted that no option should be given to pick and choose the best from
each of the sets of service rules.
present bank award or under any rules made by the bank management or
under any other laws or part thereof. The Employees Association of the
Union Bank of Bijapur and Sholapur has submitted that the new award should
apply to all categories of employees with effect from the date of its first
representation of grievances for revision of pay scales.
19.4. The Northern India Banks Association has pleaded that the new
Award should apply to workmen from the date of the order of the Award and
not from any prior date. The Travancore-Cochin Bankers Association has
pleaded that its member banks may be allowed to continue to pay the present
emoluments and that the award should be made applicable only from the
date of its publication. The National Bank of Lahore has in this respect left
the decision of the contended matters to this Tribunal and has prayed for an
award being given keeping in view the rights of the employer and the employee.
The Bharatha Lakshmi Bank has submitted that since the year 1953, it is
405
19.5. The Indian Overseas Bank has pointed out that in that bank there
are three new types of allowances namely, (l) Hindi Language Allowance, (2)
Good Conduct and Regular Attendance Allowance and (3) Key Allowance
which are being paid to certain employees and it has pleaded that when the
scales of salary and special allowances granted by this Tribunal come into
force, the bank should be at liberty to withdraw these allowances even from
those employees who are now drawing those allowances as it is contended
that the present recipients of these allowances cannot claim the scales of
salary and allowances that may be granted by this Tribunal and at the same
time insist on payment of the aforementioned allowances and it is urged that
if the employees so choose they may be given the choice to opt in toto for
the privileges and benefits they are now enjoying and they should not be
allowed to get the better of the two sets of pay and allowances.
(i) Date of Effect of the New Award
406
19.6. On behalf of the workmen a claim has been made that the new
award should come into operation from 1st April 1959. On the other hand, it
is contended on behalf of the banks that the new award should come into
operation from the date on which award becomes enforceable under the law.
In this connection, a reference may be made to the provisions contained in
section 17A of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947. Section 17A, to the extent
that it is relevant, provides as under :
on the date when the award becomes enforceable under the provisions of the
said section. I have to consider the date from which the new award should
come into operation.
*
(3)
(4)
In that case, the Labour Appellate Tribunal had agreed with the decision of
the Industrial Tribunal that the award should be given effect to from the date of
the reference.
BE
(b)
* *
AI
(2)
Provided that
*
19.7. Shri Dudhia, the learned advocate who appeared on behalf of the
All India Bank Employees Federation, drew my attention to a decision of the
Labour Appellate Tribunal of India in the case of Nellimarla Jute Mills Company
Ltd. and Staff Union, Nellimarla Jute Mills, reported in 1955 I.L.I.J. page 167,
wherein the Labour Appellate Tribunal has laid down, at page 176, as under:
19.8. It was strongly urged on behalf of the banks that the Tribunal had
no jurisdiction to make this award operative from a date prior to the date of
the Order of Reference. It was urged that unless there was an industrial
dispute raised as regards the date from which relief should be given by means
of an award and unless such a dispute was referred to the Tribunal, it would
have no jurisdiction to make the award operative with retrospective effect
from a date prior to the date of the reference. There is considerable force in
this contention.
19.9. The banks also contend that most of the disputes now raised were
the subject matter of enquiry by various Tribunals and the Bank Award
Commission, that the Sastry Tribunal itself had visualised the possibility of
the all India working class consumer price index number rising above the
level at which it had fixed the rates of dearness allowance and had made
provision in case of such a rise and that the conditions of service being wellregulated and well-considered, there was no case for giving retrospective
effect to any award that I might make. On behalf of the banks, very strong
reliance was placed on the decision of the Supreme Court in the case of
Linton Ltd. and another and their employees, reported in 1959 (1) LLJ. p,
431. At page 445 of that report the Supreme Court, in dealing with the
question of giving retrospective effect to an award has expressed itself in
terms following:
The only other point which requires consideration is the question
408
been made even on behalf of persons who are not workmen within the
meaning of the definition of the term workman under the Industrial Disputes
Act, 1947. To indicate the extreme nature of the demands, I may refer to the
statement filed by the All India Bank Employees Federation showing the
total remuneration demanded by it on behalf of stenographers employed in
banks falling within its A and B groups. As regards banks in group A, the
total remuneration demanded by way of salary and dearness allowance for a
stenographer at the all India working class consumer price Index No. 167 in
the series 1944=100, is Rs. 350 in the first year of service and Rs. 963 in the
21st year of service and as regards banks in group B it is Rs. 306.25 in the
first year of service and Rs. 918.75 in the 20th year of service. This represents
a demand only under a single head apart from the other benefits sought to be
claimed under various heads including triple retiring benefits consisting of
provident fund, gratuity and pension. The demands made by the All India
Bank Employees Association include a demand for abolition of areas, and
the grant of three retiring benefits. In the reply filed by the Bombay Exchange
Banks Association it has been stated that the approximate percentage
increase that would result if the demands made by the All India Bank Employees
Association were granted would be 53.3 per cent so far as the four Exchange
Banks for which calculations were made. It is further stated that the actual
percentage increase will be higher if the various factors excluded in estimating
the cost of the demands are included as also the adjustments made in the
case of employees drawing more than the maximum under the award scales.
The percentage is likely to be in the neighbourhood of say 60 per cent. In
respect of the demands of the employees of the State Bank of India presented
by the State Bank of India Employees Association (Bengal Circle), the State
Bank has estimated that if all the demands were granted in relation to the
award staff, the burden would increase by Rs. 7,25,36,000.
of the date from which the new scales of pay should come into
effect. The industrial tribunal fixed 1st January 1954, on the ground
that the union had presented its charter of demands to the appellant
for the first time towards the end of December 1953. We are unable
to agree with the tribunals below that the circumstance that a charter
of demands was presented in December 1953 is a good ground for
giving retrospective effect to the new scales of pay. The charter of
demands presented by the union consisted of 20 items and in the
matter of the wage scale what the union demanded was in some
cases more than 50 to 75 per cent increase on the existing scales
of pay. Obviously, the demands were exhorbitant and the
management was justified in refusing to accept the demands in
toto. We are therefore, unable to agree that retrospective effect
should be given to the new scales of pay from 1st January 1954.
The award was made on 18th August 1955, and it was published
on 6th October 1955. With think that it will be more just to bring the
new scales of pay with effect from 1st November 1955, and we
direct accordingly.
AI
BE
It is urged on behalf of the banks that the observations of the Supreme Court
in that case are applicable with even greater force to the facts of the present
case. In the present case, the charter of demands was submitted by the All
India Bank Employees Association in the month of April 1959. The All India
Bank Employees Federation, the All India State Bank of India Staff Federation
and several unions, associations and federations have submitted demands
on behalf of the workmen employed in banks. The Indian Banks Association
has filed a statement showing the financial burden for the year 1959 if the
demands of the All India Bank Employees Association were to be granted,
without including the additional burden which might result from enhanced
rates of overtime wages, officiating allowance, leave concessions, interest
on the provident fund, liberal provisions for leave, reduced hours of work,
special gratuity, risk insurance, etc. It is shown that if the demands of the
Association were granted in regard to the clerical staff the percentage of
increase in the financial burden for 11 A Class banks would vary between
102.01 per cent and 168.81 per cent for 6 B Class banks it would vary
between 114.69 per cent and 149.22 per cent and for 4 C Class banks it
would vary between 152.33 per cent and 211.40 per cent. As regards the
subordinate staff, it is shown that the percentage of increase, for the aforesaid
A Class, varies between 145.II per cent and 200.92 per cent, for B Class
banks it varies between 111.71 per cent and 171.98 per cent and for C
Class banks it varies between 162.14 per cent and 238.53 per cent. The
demands of the All India Bank Employees Federation are still more
extravagent. I have set out the demands made by various workmens
organisations under various heads in other parts of this award. Some of the
demands were not even warranted by the terms of reference. Demands have
409
(vi)
BE
19.14. In respect of all other matters,this award will come into operation
on the date when the award becomes enforceable under the provisions
section17A of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947.As regards all matters in
respect whereof this award will come into operation with effect from the date
when it becomes enforceable as aforesaid, all the existing provisions will
continue to operate, notwithstanding anything herein contained, until this
award comes into operation in respect of all such matters, for instance, for
the purpose of calculation and payment of overtime, the existing provisions
will continue to apply from 1st January 1962 till the date when the award
becomes enforceable under the provisions of section 17A, notwithstanding
the fact that the new scales of pay, dearness allowance etc. have come into
operation in the meantime.
19.16. The Labour Appellate Tribunal, observed that with certain minor
exceptions, the option should cover the totality of those conditions of service
which have a financial aspect. It permitted the option to be exercised in
respect of (1) pay, dearness allowance, house rent allowance, special
allowance and officiating allowance, and added to the list other allowances
like hill allowance and fuel allowance and the special increments given to
graduates and holders of banking diplomas, (2) provident fund, (3) gratuity
and pension, (4) leave rules, (5) working hours and overtime and (6) payment
of taxes by banks on behalf of employees. The Labour Appellate Tribunal
allowed each individual employee an option to elect for his existing conditions
of service in respect of the aforesaid items and directed that the election
must be made within five months of the date of the pronouncement of Labour
Appellate Tribunals decision and that the same should be made in writing
and presented to the head of the office or the branch in which the employees
concerned was working and that in case of a failure to make an election as
aforesaid, it was to be deemed that the employee had elected for the new
conditions of service. It further provided that during the period intervening
between the date of his election and the date on which the Labour Appellate
Tribunals decision become enforceable, the employee should be treated as
governed by the conditions of service prescribed by the Labour Appellate
Tribunal and in the event of his electing the old conditions, necessary
adjustments were to be made after his election. The Labour Appellate Tribunals
also preserved the options given under the Sastry Award on specified topics.
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv)
(v)
to apply to him for his future service in the bank. It stated that the intention
of the Tribunal was that the award should not in any way diminish the existing
pay, dearness allowance and special house rent and officiating allowances
of workmen and that to the extent to which the aggregate of pay and the
aforesaid allowances, as awarded fell short of such aggregate of pay and the
aforesaid allowances as on 31st January 1950 the difference should be kept
up; and should be continued as a temporary adjustment allowance until the
same is absorbed by further annual increments in the scale awarded.
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
AI
19.15. In dealing with the question of option the Sastry Tribunal grouped
matters as follows :
Pay, dearness allowance, special allowance, house rent allowance
and officiating allowance.
Provident fund.
Gratuity and pension
Bonus.
Leave rules
Working hours and overtime.
Conditions of service other than working hours and overtime and
Amenities, e.g. canteen, club-house, payment of taxes, etc.
It laid down that no option should be given in respect of leave rules, working
hours and overtime, conditions of service other than working hours and overtime
and amenities except as otherwise provided for in its Award. It took the view
that there would be no choice in respect of other allowances and medical
relief, except as otherwise provided for in its award, and directed that in
these matters the awarded terms would apply to all workmen. The Sastry
Tribunal further laid down that no option should be given to a workman to
choose the pre-existing scales of pay and allowances in so far as they continue
411
412
the service conditions under the heads under which the option is given.
19.18. As regards members of the clerical staff and the subordinate staff
employed in banks which are governed by the provisions of the Sastry Award
as modified or provisions similar thereto, the provisions contained in this
award are, by and large, very favourable to them. There are only few changes
which may not be favourable to them. The question of option can really arise
only in the case of those employees whose service conditions are considered
better than those provided under this award. For the exercise of option, the
matters in respect whereof such option should be exercised are grouped as
under :
(2)
(3)
BE
(1)
19.20. As regards matters set out in group 1, the option will have to be
exercised in respect of the totality of the provisions in connection with the
said matters existing immediately prior to 1st January 1962 and the totality
of the provisions contained in this award in connection with those matters.
AI
19.22. I direct that all workmen employed in banks on the date when
this award becomes enforceable under the provisions of section 17A of the
Industrial Disputes Act 1947 will have the right to exercise the option in
respect of the matters set out in each of the aforesaid groups within four
months from the said date. The option shall be exercised in writing which
shall be delivered to the head of the office or the branch in which the employee
concerned may be working. On failure to exercise the option in respect of
any group of matters in the manner aforsaid within the time specified, the
workman concerned would be deemed to have chosen the totality of the
provisions contained in this award in connection with such group of matters.
During the period intervening between the date of the exercise of such option
and the respective dates on which the provisions of this award in respect of
the aforesaid groups of matters come into effect. I direct that the workmen,
413
414
CHAPTER XX
CHAPTER XXI
20.1. Before the main hearing of the reference commenced, various applica
tions were made on behalf of workmen claiming interim relief. All these
applications have been referred to in the Introductory chapter. On 14th
December 1960 I have given my award in connection with the aforesaid
applications. The said award forms part of Appendix C. In view thereof, it is
not necessary to deal with this item at this stage.
21.1. The All India Bank Employees Association has submitted that
the above term of reference is not a valid industrial dispute perse in so far as
it is in conflict with different Schedules of the Industrial Disputes Act under
which this reference has been made, that the Sastry Award has expired and
that the question of removing difficulties or anomalies in the operation of the
Sastry Award does not arise for determination. It has made no claims under
this item. The All India Bank Employees Federation has submitted that the
banks had abused the discretion given to them under the Sastry Award and
had taken undue advantage of the vagueness or ambiguity in certain directions
given under the Sastry Award.In this connection it has referred to the following
19 instances :
AI
BE
415
(2)
(3)
year for only 11 months service put in by him. Paras 479 to 481 of
the Sastry Award are not properly interpreted by the banks in this
behalf. Further directions in regard to pay for sick leave on half pay
as given in Para 487 read with Para 478(14) of the Sastry Award
are doubtful. The employers have abused the definition of 'Pay as
defined in Paras, 151, 158, 368(7) of the Sastry Award is not taken
into consideration while making payment for sick leave on half-pay
basis.
(6)
AI
(5)
BE
(4)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10) Daily-wage or temporary employees.Further in case of Dailyrated or Temporary employees the Banks deprive them of the pay
for the Off Day and Other Public Holidays falling in between and
interrupt their service by showing a break for a day or so and again
re-appoint such persons on daily wages as Para 508(c) of the Sastry
Award is not clear and as such banks are abusing the same.
(11) Temporary employees.Very often banks employ Godownkeepers, Cashiers, Clerks, Godown Chowkidars, Godown Durvans,
etc. on temporary basis against permanent vacancies and are given
extension each month by giving appointment letters or extension
letters, although the work is of a permanent nature. The banks
deny these employees, whether part-time, daily-rated or temporary,
the benefits of leave (casual, privilege or sick), medical-aid, Provident
Fund, Gratuity etc. despite the directions contained in Paras 496
and 524 of the Sastry Award.
BE
(13) Seniority.For the purposes of seniority the banks treat the date
of confirmation instead of date of joining of the employees.
AI
21.2. The All India State Bank of India Staff Federation and the State
Bank of India Staff Union, Andhra Pradesh in their statements of claim have
merely craved leave to make submissions in this connection at the time of
the hearing. The All India Bank of Baroda Employees Federation has sought
clarification about this item and has craved leave to make its submissions
after such clarification. The Vadodra Rajya Bank Nokar Sangh has complained
of the improper implementation of the Sastry Award by banks, but has not
given any instances in support of its statement. It has submitted that a
permanent suitable machinery should be established where all anomalies
and difficulties could be thrashed out.
21.3. The Indian Overseas Bank Employees Union, Madras, has made
the following demands :
(a) Recruitment of staff :
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
Transfers :
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(f)
(g)
(b)
(g)
(c)
(h)
(i)
BE
(d)
AI
(f)
(a)
(c)
(e)
(e)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(2)
Service for all purposes such as gratuity, provident fund, leave, etc.
should be counted from the date of joining.
(2)
(3)
21.5. The Allahabad Bank Employees Union (Calcutta) has stated that
the provisions relating to recruitment, transfer, training and promotions
contained a good number of anomalies in the present award and that they
should be clearly defined so as not to leave any further anomalies.
21.6. On behalf of a number of banks it is denied that this term of reference
dealing with difficulties and anomalies in the operation of the existing award
did not relate to an industrial dispute. The Bombay Exchange Banks
Association has pointed out that the termination of the Sastry Award only
signified that the workmen were free to make fresh demands and nothing
422
(2)
(3)
BE
more, and that the Sastry Award as modified still continued in the sense that
the rights and obligations flowing therefrom still continued and that this term
of reference was in order. The Indian Banks Association has set out various
anomalies in the operation of the existing award and have claimed their
removal. The Exchange Banks Association has stated that at the time of
hearing, it will make its submissions on the difficulties and anomalies
encountered in the operation of the Sastry Award as modified. The State
Bank of India has also set out certain difficulties and anomalies encountered
in the operation of the present award. The difficulties and anomalies pointed
out by the banks will be dealt with after the demands of the employees have
been considered.
(4)
21.9. In connection with the claims made under this item, I may in general
observe that this item is not intended to cover any case of non-Implementation
of the Sastry Award, as modified. ,
(5)
21.10. Some of the claims made on behalf of the employees under this
item of reference have already been considered under the specific items of
reference under which they really fall.
(6)
(7)
AI
21.8. It is further contended that the Sastry Award has expired and that
the question of removing any difficulties experienced or any anomalies found
in the operation of the said award does not arise. The provisions of the Sastry
Award, as modified have not ceased to operate and the rights and obligations
flowing therefrom still continue until the same have been duly modified. If the
position had been otherwise, the banks would have been free to deal with
their employees in such manner as they liked until a new award came into
force.
21.12. I shall first deal with the matters raised by the All India Bank
Employees' Federation :
(1)
(8) to (14) Transfers, etc. No evidence has been led in support of the
424
are given.
21.16. The difficulties and anomalies referred to by the Indian Banks
Association in the operation of the existing award are dealt with below :
(a)
(15) Extraction of securities. The matter has been dealt with under
chapter XII.
21.17. The Sastry Tribunal has directed that in case of persons whose
work was not found to be quite satisfactory during the period of probation but
who were likely to improve and give satisfaction if a further opportunity was
given to them, the period of probation might be extended by three months
provided due notice in writing was given to them and their consent in writing
was obtained before the extension of their period of probation and that in all
other cases probationers, after the expiry of the period of six months, should
be deemed to have been confirmed, unless their services were dispensed
with on or before the expiry of the period of probation.
BE
AI
21.13. A claim has been made by the Vadodra Rajya Bank Nokar Sangh
for the establishment of a permanent suitable machinery for thrashing out all
anomalies and difficulties in the operation of the existing award. No indication
has been given about the type of machinery which was sought to be
constituted. No relief is given in connection with this demand.
who may be on leave. The aforesaid position is some what anomalous and
the definition needs to be modified. The Indian Banks Association has not
confined its demand to this anomalous position. It has also claimed an
amendment of the definition in order to include a workman appointed in a
temporary vacancy of a probationer.A probationer is appointed so that he
may ultimately be absorbed in a permanent vacancy. The very object of
employing a probationer is to train a person for filling in a permanent vacancy.
The object of having probationers is not to provide Supplementary staff for the
purpose of doing the regular work of the bank, so that wherever a vacancy
occurs in such supplementary staff, even temporarily such vacancy should
be filled in.I direct that for the purpose of this award the expression Temporary
Employee will mean an employee who has been appointed for a limited
period for work which is of an essentially temporary nature, or who is employed
temporarily as an additional employee in connection with a temporary increase
in work of a permanent nature, and includes an employee other than a
permanent employee who is appointed in a temporary vacancy of a permanent
workman.
Transfer of staff to lower areas and adjustment into salary scales
21.21. Under the provisions of the Sastry Award as modified it has been
provided by paragraph 121(5) that no employee shall have his basic pay
reduced by being transferred to an area where a lesser pay scale applies
even though such basic pay may be more than the maximum of the scale
fixed for the new station, and he will continue to have the usual inccrements
as from such basic pay onwards.Directions to a similar effect have been
given by me under this award in paragraph 5.190. The Indian Banks Association
has stated that many employees ask for transfers from higher areas to lower
areas to suit their own convenience or for domestic reasons and that when
such transfers are granted banks have to pay to such employees a higher
basic pay. It is suggested that whenever an employee is transferred from a
higher area to a lower area at his own request, he should draw basic pay
according to the rates applicable to the area to which he is so transferred. By
an amendment made on 19th September 1961, the Indian Banks Association
has further pleaded that the emoluments of an employee who has been
transferred from a lower area to a higher area should be adjusted in accordance
with the provisions of para 292 of the Sastry Award and not in accordance
with the provisions of para 121(5) thereof." The matter relating to the method
of adjustment on the transfer of an employee from a higher area to a lower
area and vice versa has been dealt with by me in other parts of this award.
In my view, the provisions complained of do not give rise to any difficulties or
anomalies. Even on merits the claims made are rejected.
AI
BE
21.19. The Indian Banks Association has submitted that the direction in
the Sastry Award that the banks cannot employ part-time workers for ordinary
clerical work except for writing pass books in banks in which such practice
prevailed has caused great hardship and difficulties to various banks,
particularly in the branches in rural areas where it is stated that the volume of
work in the nature of things is limited, uncertain and dependent upon seasonal
necessities: It is further stated that in small towns, the work of pass book
writing is so limited that it becomes uneconomic for a bank (where such
practice did not prevail) to employ a full-time pass book writer and that in
several small branches, the banks must either employ a full-time employee
who may remain idle for the rest of the time during working hours, or resort to
overtime work by entrusting that work to existing full-time employees. It is
further stated that certain type of work has to be done only periodically such
as submission of statements to the Reserve Bank and the preparation of
periodical returns.It has been suggested that in order to remove these
difficulties and hardships, liberty should be given to banks to engage parttime workers to the extent of 25 per cent of the total complement.It is somewhat
invidious that banks, which at the time when Sastry Award came into force,
were engaging part-time employees to write pass books, could alone employ
part-time employees for the purpose whilst banks which did not have parttime employees then could not thereafter employ such employees for that
purpose.The remedy however does not consist in having a right to engage
part-time workers to the extent of 25 per cent of the total complement. It
seems that the intention of the Sastry Tribunal was not to extend such practice.
There is no other item of reference whereunder this demand could be
considered by me. This matter has been dealt with by the Sastry Tribunal
under a term of reference headed "Method of recruitment terms and conditions
of service and procedure for termination of employment or for taking other
disciplinary action. On behalf of the employees, an exception is taken to
this demand. The employees are against the employment of part-time workmen
except sweepers and cleaners. In view of the terms of reference, I do not
think it would be proper for me to deal with this claim about the right of the
banks to engage part-time workers to the extent of 25 per cent of the total
complement under item 19. I give no directions in connection with this demand.
(c) Classification of workmen
21.20. The Sastry Tribunal, has defined the expression Temporary
employee to mean an employee who has been appointed for a limited period
for work which is of an essentially temporary nature, or who is employed
temporarily as an additional employee in connection with a temporary increase
in work of a permanent nature.The Indian Banks Association has made a
demand that this definition should be enlarged so as to include a workman
who is appointed in a temporary vacancy of a permanent workman or
probationer. It is pleaded that under the present provision banks cannot
employ a temporary employee as a substitute for a permanent employee
427
21.22. I will now deal with the difficulties and anomalies pointed out by
the State Bank of India.It is pleaded that under the Sastry Award as modified,
the directions relating to hours of work and overtime are not applicable to
certain named categories which do not, however, included categories whose
428
BE
21.23. It is pleaded that the State Bank of India has been compelled to
pay to godown-keepers, engaged in connection with borrowers godowns, on
the clerical scale, notwithstanding that the qualifications expected of them
are lesser than those expected of clerks and that this category should be
paid on a scale slightly above that of subordinate staff, but not on the same
scale as clerks. No evidence has been led in support of this demand and no
case is made out for providing separate scales for this category of workmen
and no such directions are given.
AI
430
Item No. 21 :
BE
22.5. In regard to the special needs of the State Bank of India and its
subsidiaries, the State Bank of Patiala (All Cadres) Employees Association
has stated that the State Bank of India has clearly laid out its policy of
helping the small scale and cottage industries and small business in order to
give impetus to the Five Year Plans, that the State Bank of Patiala which is
a subsidiary of the State Bank of India was also bound to follow the policy of
the State Bank of India in respect of financing the small scale and cottage
industries and small business, that like the State Bank of India, the State
Bank of Patiala would also be called upon to do the treasury business on
behalf of the Government of India and State Government and to act as the
agent of the Government and to do other business on behalf of the Government
and that the State Bank of Patiala had a very important role to play as an
agent of the Government in the area of its operation.
Item No. 20 :
development including the First and Second Five Year Plans have laid great
emphasis on the all round development of our rural areas, that India was
predominantly an agricultural country and our development plans would not
make much headway if we did not give top priority to the rural areas, that
finance was the backbone of all economic development plans, that availability
of cheap finance for our rural industries and agriculture was very essential
and that the banking industry could play a very important role in this behalf
by financing agriculture and cottage industries in the villages.
CHAPTER XXII
THE NEED FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE BANKING
INDUSTRY INCLUDING BANKING FACILITIES IN RURAL
AREAS;
AND
SPECIAL NEEDS OF THE STATE BANK OF INDIA AND
ITS SUBSIDIARIES IN RESPECT OF ANY OF THE FOREGOING ITEMS(ITEMS 1 TO 20 APPEARING IN SCHEDULE
II TO THE ORDER OF REFERENCE) HAVING REGARD
TO THEIR RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE CONDUCT OF
GOVERNMENT BUSINESS.
22.6. The Indian Banks Association has denied that any of the above
items did not constitute a valid industrial dispute and has stated that it cannot
be gainsaid that banking facilities should be extended to rural areas and that
the banks must be encouraged to open branches in semi-urban and rural
centres. It has submitted that such branches could be run only if they could
be made into economic and self-supporting units, if not immediately, then in
the near future and that, with this end in view it was necessary to have certain
amount of flexibility and informality as, in the absence thereof it would be
difficult to run branches and popularise banking with the rural population. It
has further submitted that the nature of the work at branches of banks in rural
areas was of an intermittent character because mostly the trade was seasonal
and that it was essential that Class D and Area IV should be retained. It has
stated that the hours of work which may be found appropriate for urban areas
would not fit in with the environments and the nature of work in rural areas
and has submitted that the hours of work should be eight per day including
Saturdays or 208 hours per month on the lines of hours prescribed by the
Shops and Establishments Acts in the various State, that the employees
may be required to do overtime not exceeding three hours a week, that leave
rules should be more restricted than those prescribed for urban areas, so
that leave entitlements in branches in rural areas may be three-fourths of
those which may be prescribed in other areas, and that banks should be at
liberty to employ such number of part-time hands as may be thought
necessary to meet the requirements of branches in rural areas according to
431
432
AI
22.2. The All India Bank Employees Federation has stated that it wants
the expansion of banking industry in every nook and corner of the country. It
has submitted that the banks should extend the same terms and conditions
of service to the employees in rural areas as those prevailing in other areas
when new branches are opened by the banks in those areas. It has also
submitted that the employees of the State Bank subsidiaries should get the
same benefits as the State Bank of Indias employees.
22.3. The All India Bank of Baroda Employees Federation has supported
the claims made in this connection by the All India Bank Employees
Association in respect of item No. 20.
the exigencies of the case. It has further pleaded that places having a
population of 50000 or less should be deemed to be in rural areas and that
Area IV should be redefined as comprising all towns and cities having
population of 50,000 or less.
22.7. The Bombay Exchange Banks Association has stated that it was
difficult to reconcile the demands made on behalf of the All India Bank
Employees Association for expansion of banking facilities, particularly in
rural areas, with the demand for eliminating area-wise wage structure. It has
further submitted that if commercial banks were required to extend threir
operations to rural area, it should be ensured that these would not involve the
banks in uneconomic ventures the more so as for security reasons the banks
would require to have more staff than would be usual in the case of other
industries in small areas. They have drawn attention to the fact that work in
rural areas would be seasonal and on the whole, intermittent.
AI
BE
22.8. The State Bank of India has pleaded that item 20 was of particular
significance in the case of the State Bank of India as a statutory obligation
was cast upon the State Bank of India to open during the first five years at
least 400 new branches in smaller centres to transact Government business
to provide cheaper finance to small scale industries, co-operative institutions,
etc., and to extend banking facilities to rural and semi-urban areas, that the
State Bank had carried out its statutory obligation and that out of 416 branches
opened upto 30th June 1960, over 353 branches were running at a loss, that
the existing pay structure in the remote places in the interior where the State
Bank in public interest has to operate cast an unduly heavy and onerous
burden, especially as in the case of banks for security and other reasons a
larger staff had to be maintained even in smaller places than would be the
case in respect of other concerns. It has submitted that the present wage
structure should not be revised upwards and that there should be no attempt
to abolish the present Class IV area.
22.9. After referring to the reasons for establishing the State Bank of
India, it points out that when it came into being it took over from its predecessor,
the Imperial Bank of India, 14,462 employees working in 239 branches and
234 sub-offices, that since then, it has employed about 10,000 employees in
addition to providing replacements for retirement, resignation, etc., and had
increased the number of branches to 652 and had sub offices in 233 places.
It has pleaded that one of the obligations and duties of the State Bank was to
act as the agent of the Reserve Bank and that in that capacity the State
Bank had to undertake the following functions :
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
As regards custody of currency chests, it has stated that the work of the
433
BE
(5)
22.11. In connection with remittance facilities, the bank states that its
work is as under :
AI
It has pleaded that if the above functions were to be discharged by the State
Bank to the entire satisfaction of the Governments concerned, the Reserve
Bank and particularly the public, directions should be given to meet the special
needs of the State Bank to the following effect :
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
The nature of the business under these heads is similar to the nature of
the business under the same heads referred to by the State Bank of India. It
is pointed out on behalf of the Subsidiary banks that the State Governments
are authorised to instruct the Subsidiary bank to keep branches or offices
436
22.15. Under the provisions of section 10(1A) of the Act, it is open to the
Central Government to refer any matter appearing to be connected with or
relevant to any industrial dispute which exists or is apprehended whether it
relates to any matter specified in the Second Schedule or the Third Schedule.
An industrial dispute exists in connection with the various items under
reference. Items 20 and 21 are relevant to matters in respect whereof industrial
disputes exist. The Central Government appears to have specified these
items so that the aspects of the matter set out in items 20 and 21 may not be
lost sight of, and very probably, so that the attention of the Tribunal may be
specifically focussed on these aspects of the matter. Normally, where parties
interested are duly represented and the representatives discharge their duties
properly, all aspects of the matter relevant to the dispute are brought to the
notice of the Tribunal. The mere fact that the referring authority has thought it
fit to focus the attention of the Tribunal as well as of the parties to particular
aspects of a matter relevant to the disputes would not in any manner aftect
the reference or render the Reference in connection with such items beyond
the powers of the referring authority.
AI
BE
22.13. The Northern India Banks Association has submitted that it was
common knowledge that India was yet not equipped with banking facilities
appropriate to the size of the country, that if banking habit was to be extended
to the whole nation in the interest of the maximum mobilisation of reserves
for national development, special provision would have to be made for either
exempting the banking officers in certain categories of towns from the operation
of the Award or fixing the scale of emoluments for such places in conformity
with the cost of living in such places and that this was all the more necessary
as the earning capacity of such offices was bound to be low.The Travancore
Cochin Bankers Association has submitted that banks incorporated in Kerala
presented peculiar problems of their own while occupying at the same time a
very important place in the rural economy of that part of the country.It has
submitted that the Tribunal should accept the view that industries should be
established, that they should function, that they should progress and become
large units and that at a time when the banks are consolidating their position
their progress should not be crippled by casting on them unbearable burdens.
The Association has prayed that its members banks should be allowed
sufflcient time to grow and become bigger and sound units. The Bharatha
Lakshmi Bank Limited has submitted that most of the rural areas were not
served by any banking institutions, that the mobilisation of the resources
available in the rural areas, could best be done only by smaller banks as their
operative costs were always lower, that the rural areas could not be saddled
with heavy expenditure of bank management, that small banks with their
local Directors and Local Advisory Boards in rural areas would be able to
know the rural people better and that they were, therefore, best suited to
develop rural bankings.
and bank-workmen, nor were these items connected with the employment or
non-employment or the terms of employment or with the conditions of labour
of any person. It was further submitted that the State Bank of India had not at
any time posed this issue so as to constitute it into an industrial dispute, nor
was it capable of being constituted as in industrial dispute. It was further
submitted that the Order of Reference in so far as items 20 and 21 were
concerned, was invalid and ultra vires the powers of the Central Government
under sub-section (IA) of section 10 of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947. It
was submitted that section 10(1A) permitted the reference to a National
Tribunal of any matter specified in the Second Schedule or the Third Schedule
of the Industrial Disputes Act, if the Central Government was of the opinion
that any industrial dispute existed or was apprehended in respect of such
matters. It was urged that items 20 and 21 were not covered by either the
second or the third schedule that they did not constitute the subject matter
of any existing or apprehended industrial dispute and that they could not be
the subject matter of a valid Order of Reference and therefore could not be
the subject matter of adjudication by this Tribunal.
22.14. It has been contended that items 20 and 21 do not and could not
form the subject matter of an industrial dispute within the meaning of the
Industrial Disputes Act.It was submitted that these two items of reference
were not the subject matter of any dispute or difference between bankers and
bankers, Or between bankers and bank-workmen or between bank-workmen
437
438
439
440
AI
BE
over the country would enable the co-operative institutions situated in any
part of the country to have banking transactions with institutions situated in
any other part of the country. The State Bank has stated that it has played a
pioneering role by being the first commercial bank in India to evolve a suitable
procedure for making advances against warehouse receipts. The State Bank
is playing an important role in the development of the banking industry,
including banking facilities in rural areas.
CHAPTER XXIII
Item No 22 : ANY OTHER QUESTION CONNECTED WITH, OR ARISING
OUT OF, THE FOREGOING MATTERS, (ITEMS NOS. I TO
21 IN SCHEDULE II TO THE ORDER OF REFERENCE.)
23.1. Under this item the following claims have been made on behalf of
the employees.
22.19. I am informed that the State Bank and its Subsidiaries have a
plan for opening 300 branches for the five year period from 1st July 1960 to
31st July 1965, at centres to be selected from rural and semi-urban areas.
AI
BE
22.21. The only demand which has not been dealt with under other heads is
the demand made on behalf of the State Bank and its Subsidiaries that the
watchmen and armed guards who are part of security staff should be enjoyed
by this Tribunal in the interest of the protection of the Government treasure to
desist from participating in sporadic strikes without giving at least 14 days
notice to enable the State Bank and its Subsidiaries to make alternative
security arrangements. It is necessary that Government treasure should be
fully protected during all hours and it is requisite that persons employed to
guard such treasure should not participate in sporadic strikes without giving
sufficient notice to the State Bank of India and its Subsidiaries to make
alternative security arrangements. The question about the circumstances
and conditions under which workmen can go on strike does not arise for
determination by me in this Reference and I refrain from giving any directions
in connection therewith.
441
(v)
(8) Transfers
Officers of the Union should not be transferred. If at all any transfers are
essential the number should be limited and that too should be effected only
with the consent of the employee concerned within the State or language
area (language means official language of the place).
BE
(5) Apprentices
AI
(10) Promotion
other workmen.
Every employee who leaves service or retires or is dismissed or discharged shall without avoidable delay be given a service certificate, as provided
in the Sastry Award.
(11) Retrenchment
AI
BE
IntermediateOne increment.
GraduatesTwo increments.
Double GraduatesThree increments.
C.A.I.I.B, (Part I)One increment.
C.A.I.I.B. (Part II)Two increments.
l/10th of the total annual profits earned by the banks should be allocated
towards Staff Welfare Fund which shall be administered by a Board of Trustees
to be created for this purpose. The Management and the workers shall have
equal number of representatives on this Board.
Armed Guards, Chowkidars and all other members of Watch and Ward
Staff should be allowed weekly off, National and other Gazetted holidays like
445
446
Employees Association.
Elected representatives of the employees should be taken on all
the committees dealing with staff matters,
For the settlement of all disputes arising from time to time, a suitable
machinery should be evolved in consultation with the Union
representative, the management and the Labour Commissioner.
(24) Canteens
The banks should arrange to provide well furnished canteen and Tiffin
Rooms at all their offices.
The Bank should provide employees with quarters on subsidized basis.
(26) Bonus
AI
BE
Union activities. The Bank should provide facilities for all the recognised Unions
for collection of subscriptions posting of their notices and such other matters
approved by the appropriate Governments. It is claimed that a representative
of the union employed in the bank should be given leave when he is required
to attend some special work in connection with the trade union conferences
and committees.
23.6. The All India Bank Employees Association has sought to connect
this demand with item No. 6, viz., pension and gratuity. The demand for
compensation in the case of injury resulting from an accident while on duty
cannot with any propriety be called gratuity which is a retiring benefit. The
demand has been opposed by banks. Even if I had the jurisdiction to deal
with the matter, on the present state of the record, I am not in a position to
give any specific directions in connection with the same. It is a matter which,
in my view, can be more suitably dealt with by the legislature than by a
Tribunal. I give no directions in connection with this demand.
BE
AI
449
450
(d)
nature,
part-time employee means an employee who does not or is not
required to work for the full period for which an employee is ordinarily
required to work and who is paid on the basis that he is or may be
engaged in doing work elsewhere.
right to operate its business to the best advantage, bearing in mind the special
circumstances existing in rural areas and in particular the seasonal character
of banking business in those areas. The State Bank of India has taken a
stand similar to that of Bombay Exchange Banks Association.
23.15. For the purpose of this award, it would not be out of place to
classify workman and to define the various classes in which workmen fall.
Having considered all the demands made both by workmen and the banks. I
direct that workmen, for the purpose of this award be generally classified as
(a) permanent employees, (b) probationers, (c) temporary employees, and
(d) part-time employees. These expressions will have the following meanings
for the purpose of this award :
23.11. The All India Bank Employees Federation has sought to amend
the aforesaid definition of a probationer by substituting the words who is
provisionally employed to fill a vacancy or a post for the word who is
provisionally employed to fill a permanent vacancy or post.
AI
23.13. The Indian Banks Association has pleaded that the present
classification as laid down in the Sastry Award should be maintained subject
to the modification suggested by it. The Indian Banks Association had under
item 19 claimed that the definition of the expression temporary employee
as given in the Sastry Award should be amended by adding the words and
includes a workman who is appointed in a temporary vacancy of a permanent
workman or probationer at the end of the definition. Whilst dealing with the
said demand I have directed that the definition of temporary employee as
given in the Sastry Award should be amended by adding at the end the words
and includes an employee other than a permanent employee who is appointed
in a temporary vacancy of a permanent workman.
23.14. The Bombay Exchange Banks Association has pleaded that the
demand does not arise under item No. 22. Without prejudice to the aforesaid
contention it has suggested the following definitions :
Permanent workman means an employee who has been appointed
as such by the management. A probationer means an employee
who is provisionally employed to fill a permanent vacancy or post
and has not been made permanent or confirmed in service.
Temporary employee means a person who has been appointed for
a temporary period which may be specified. A part-time employee
is one who does not work full time.
(a)
BE
23.12. The All India State Bank of India Staff Federation and the State
Bank of India Staff Union, Andhra Pradesh, have demanded by way of an
amendment to the definition that a permanent employee should also mean
an employee who has served the bank continuously for a period of six months.
The All India Bank Employees Association has further pleaded that there
should not be any part-time workman in any category except sweepers and
cleaners. The All India Bank Employees Federation has gone a step further
and has demanded that there should not be any part-time workman in any
category whatsoever and has pleaded that part-time employees working for
more than 3 hours a day should be treated as full time ones.
It is further pleaded that the demand that there should not be any parttime workmen in any category except sweepers and cleaners was
unreasonable and unjustified and if granted would fetter the managements
451
452
are given.
23.19. There is no merit in the demand that where daily rated and/or
temporary hands remain in employment for an aggregate period of 3 months
during any 12 consecutive months they should be deemed to be probationers
and should be so covered and absorbed against permanent vacancies. The
said demand is opposed by the banks and the same is rejected. As regards
the demand that all employees working for 3 months or more should be
deemed as confirmed, save as otherwise provided in this award no directions
are given.
BE
23.20. There is a demand made that banks should give a written order
specifing the kind of appointment, the period of appointment and the pay and
allowances which a person would be entitled to, on his appointment by the
bank as a whole time employee or as a part-time employee or as a temporary
employee or as a probationer. The demand has been opposed by some of
the banks. The Sastry Tribunal in paragraph 495 of its award has provided
that on a candidates appointment as a temporary employee, a probotioner
or a permanent member of the staff, the bank shall give him a written order
specifying the kind of appointment and the pay and allowances to which he
would be entitled and that such a written order shall be given on the
appointment of a part-time employee also. I give directions similar to those
contained in the Sastry Award. I further direct that wherever possible the
banks should, except in the case of permanent employees; specify the period
of employment.
23.23. The demand that an apprentice who has already been in the
service of a bank for a total period of six months should be deemed, to be a
permanent employee of the bank appears to me to be unreasonable, so also
the demand that apprentices who have already been in the service of a bank
for a total period of two months should be deemed as probationers and
confirmed accordingly. I have carefully considered all the demands made in
connection with apprentices.Save as otherwise expressly provided in this
award.I do not give any further or other directions in connection with
apprentices.
AI
23.21. (5) Apprentices. A demand has been made that banks should
not be permitted to appoint any apprentices at all. This demand is connected
by the All India Bank Employees Association with item No. 14, namely
categories of workmen to whom the award of the Tribunal should be
applicable. The All India Bank Employees Federation has raised the question
relating to apprentices under this item as well as under item No. 19 namely
difficulties and anomalies in the operation of the existing award. The Bombay
Exchange Banks Association has pleaded that this demand does not arise
under item 22. There is no merit in this demand. Various persons join a bank
as apprentices even for the purpose of passing the C.A.I.I.B. and C.A.I.B.
examinations. On the footing that I have jurisdiction to deal with the matter,
the demand is rejected. Various demands have been made in connection
with aprentices. I have only jurisdiction to give directions in connection with
apprentices who are workmen. I have already given certain directions in
connection with apprentices in paragraph 5.192 of this award.
23.22. Serious allegations have been made against banks in connection
with the engagement of apprentices which have been denied. There is not
much evidence in support of these allegations. The Sastry Tribunal in paragraph
497 of its award has directed that the period of apprenticeship, except in the
case of those who work in banks so as to qualify themselves for the
453
think it proper to insist upon their confirmation even after the expiry
of any definite period, particularly as we understand that their
emoluments and service conditions in actual practice are not
generally different from those of the permanent employees. We
however recommend that as far as possible such godowns keepers
whose work is found to be satisfactory and whose services can be
utilized to look after other godowns in the same place or a place
nearby or in the clerical establishment of the banks should be
made permanent after the expiry of one year.
The claim made before me does not fall within any of the items covered by
the reference. Ever, if I had the jurisdiction, the demand as made does not
appear to me to be reasonable and I am not giving any directions as claimed.
AI
BE
23.31.
(13)
(15)
(16)
(18)
the matter cannot be dealt with by me under the present terms of reference.
Save as otherwise provided in other parts of this award, no directions are
given in connection with the demands made under this head.
BE
23.36. (21), (23), (24), (25), & (26) Insurance rebate, Welfare fund,
Dearness allowance to pensioners, Canteens, Quarters for the
employees and bonusDemands made under the above heads do not fall
within the ambit of the terms of reference and no directions are given in
connection therewith.
AI
Under this head a demand has been made that no employee should be
compelled by a bank to provide a substitute whenever he is on leave. This
matter does not fall within the ambit of the terms of reference -and no
connections are given in connection therewith.
458
CHAPTER XXIV
COSTS
CHAPTER XXV
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
25.1. In the end, I wish to acknowledge the great help and assistance
received by me at the hearing of the Reference from counsel, solicitors and
advocates and the representatives of the parties appearing before me. I am
thankful to them for the dignity and decorum with which the proceedings
were conducted and for the high intellectual level that was maintained
throughout the proceedings. All of them worked hard and for long to place the
respective points of view of the parties before me. But for their help and
assistance I would not have been able to do full justice to the matter.
AI
BE
459
to all the members of the staff who worked hard during the time the award
was being written and who did not avail themselves of a number of Sundays
and holidays.
APPENDIX A
GOVERNMENT OF INDIA
KANTILAL T. DESAI,
Presiding Officer,
Naoon 1 Industrial Tribunal
(Bank Disputes)
BOMBAY;
7th, June, 1962.
AI
BE
461
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
SCHEDULE I
Allahabad Bank Limited.
Ambat Bank Limited:
Bank of Baroda Limited.
Bank of India Limited.
Bank of China.
Bank of Behar Limited.
Bank of Maharashtra Limited.
Bank of Rajasthan Limited.
Bharatha Lakshmi Bank Limited.
Canara Bank Limited.
Canara Banking Corporation Limited,
Canara Industrial and Banking Syndicate Limited.
Catholic Syrian Bank Limited.
Central Bank of India Limited.
Chaldean Syrian Bank Limited.
Chartered Bank.
Cochin Commercial Bank Limited.
Comptoir National DEscompte de Paris.
Devkaran Nanjee Banking Company Limited.
Eastern Bank Limited.
First National City Bank of New York.
462
4.
5.
463
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
BE
AI
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
35.
36.
37.
38.
39.
40.
41.
42.
43.
44.
45.
46.
47.
48.
49.
50.
51.
52.
53.
54.
55.
56.
57.
58.
59.
60.
61.
62.
63.
64.
65.
66.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
464
Copy forwarded to :
SCHEDULE
AI
GOVERNMENT OF INDIA
MINISTRY OF LABOUR AND EMPLOYMENT
New Delhi, the 4th June, 1960
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
BE
All banks.
The Secretary, Indian Banks' Association, Devkaran Nanjee
Building, 17 Horniman Circle, Fort, Bombay-1.
3. The Chairman, Bombay Exchange Banks Association, c/o
Chartered Bank, Box No. 558, Bombay-1.
*4. The General Secretary, All India Bank Employees Association,
Katra Shahanshai, Chandni Chowk, Delhi.
*5. The General Secretary, All India Bank Employees Federation, 26/
104, Birhana Road, Kanpur.
*6, The Secretary, All India State Bank of India Staff Federation, State
Bank Building, Fort, Bombay-1.
*7. The General Secretary, State Bank of India Employees Association,
Bengal Circle, 3 Commercial Buildings, 23, Netaji Subhas Road,
Calcutta- 1.
8. All State Governments.
*9. Shri Justice K. T. Desai, Judge, High Court, Bombay.
10. Ministry of Finance (Deptt. of E.A.), New Delhi (5 copies).
11. C. L. C.. New Delhi (20 copies).
12. All R. L. C.s.
*I.
2.
(Sd.) S. N. TULSIANI,
Under Secretary.
[10 (48) 60LP-II]
ORDER
(Sd.) S. N. TULSIANI,
Under Secretary.
GOVERNMENT OF INDIA
MINISTRY OF LABOUR AND EMPLOYMENT
New Delhi, the 21 March, 1960
NOTIFICATION
S. O. 704.In exercise of the powers conferred by Section 7B of the
Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, (14 of 1947) the Central Government hereby
constitutes a National Industrial Tribunal with headquarters at Bombay and
appoints Shri Justice Kantilal Thakordas Desai, Judge, Bombay High Court,
as the Presiding Officer of that Tribunal.
(Sd.)P. M. MENON,
Secretary
[IR. II. 10(48)/60-I]
466
GOVERNMENT OF INDIA
MINISTRY OF LABOUR AND EMPLOYMENT
New Delhi, the 21st March, 1960
APPENDIX B
GOVERNMENT OF INDIA
MINISTRY OF LABOUR AND EMPLOYMENT
ORDER
(1)
(2)
(Sd.)P. M. MENON,
Secretary.
[IR. II-10(48)-60-III.]
FOR BANKS
AI
BE
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
Shri D. B. Tilak, Advocate, for the (1) Bharatha Lakshmi Bank Ltd.,
(2) The Bank of Nagpur Ltd., (afterwards merged with the Bank of
Maharashtra Ltd), (3) The Union Bank of Bijapur and Sholapur and
(4) The Chaldean Syrian Bank Ltd.
(8)
(a)
468
(14) Shri K. N. Seshadri Nath, representative, for the South Indian Bank
Ltd.
FOR WORKMEN
Sarvashree K. T. Sule and D. S. Nargolkar, Advocates, instructed
by Sarvashree, (1) A. C. Kakar, President (ii) G. N. Trikannad and
P. R. Bhata, Vice-president, (iii) Prabhat Kar, M. P., General
Secretary, (iv) H. L. Parwana, Tarakeswar Chakraborly, K. J. Joseph,
B. K. Porwal, and K. K. Mundol, Assistant Secretaries, for the All
India Bank Employees' Association.
Shri C. L. Dudhia, Advocate, Shri V. B. Gandhi and Shri G. D.
Ambekar (for sometime) instructed by Sarvashree (i) C. L.
Bharadwaj, Vice-President (ii) V. N. Sekhari, General Secretary,
(iii) S. K. Biswas, Organising Secretary and (iv) O. P. Nigam, Joint
Secretary, for the All India Bank Employees Federation.
(3)
(4)
Shri Jyoti Ghose, General Secretary for the State Bank of India
Employees' Association (Bengal Circle).
(5)
Shri Kidar Nath Malhotra, General Secretary, for the Slate Bank of
India Employees Association. (Delhi Circle).
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
AI
BE
(2)
(1)
470
versus
APPENDIX C
Opponents
Opponent.
BE
AI
Applicant
Opponents
Applicant
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
Applicant,
versus
Opponent.
versus
The Banking Companies and Corporations specified in
Schedule I to the Order No. S.O. 705, dated the 21st March
1960 of the Government of India in the Ministry of Labour and
Employment, New Delhi ...
Opponents.
versus
(1) United Commercial Bank Ltd.,
(2) Punjab National Bank Ltd.,
(3) Central Bank of India Ltd.
Opponent
Applicant
versus
Opponent
Applicant
Applicant
versus
471
Opponents
versus
...
versus
...
...
versus
472
Applicant
Opponents
(1)
(2)
(3)
Applicant
(4)
Opponent.
(5)
Opponent
PRESENT :
AI
APPEARANCES:
For the Applicants:
BE
versus
(7)
Shri D. B. Tilak, Advocate, for the Bharata Lakxmi Bank Ltd., the
Bank of Nagpur, the Union Bank of Bijapur and Sholapur and the
Chaldean Syrian Bank Ltd., (Four Banks).
(8)
(1)
(9)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
473
(9)
(10)
(11)
(12)
(13)
(14)
INDUSTRY ; BANKING
Bombay, 14th Dec. 1960.
INTERIM AWARD
The workmen represented by the various Associations, Federations and
Unions have applied for grant of interim relief pending the hearing and final
disposal of the above Reference and the coming into force of the award to be
given in the above Reference.
(2)
from 1-4-1959.
(3)
(4)
The Vadodra Rajya Bank Nokar Sangh, Baroda, has claimed interim relief at
25 per cent of the basic wages with a minimum of Rs. 25 per month for all
the employees with effect from 1st April 1959. The Surat Bank Employees
Union, Surat has claimed interim relief at 25 per cent of the basic wages
with a minimum of Rs. 25 per month for all employees with effect from 1st
April 1959. The New Citizen Bank of India Supervisory Staff Union, Bombay,
has claimed interim relief at the rate of 25 per cent of the basic salary with a
minimum of Rs. 25 per month.The State Bank of Patiala (All
Cadres)Employees Association, Patiala, has claimed by way of immediate
relief 25 per cent of wages with a minmum of Rs. 25. The Pandyan Bank
Employees Union, has prayed that the application made by the All India
Bank Employees' Association for interim relief may be treated as an application
filed by the Pandyan Bank Employees Union, Madras, on behalf of the
workmen of Pandyan Bank Ltd. and has further prayed that the Tribunal
should direct the Pandyan Bank Ltd., to implement the scales of pay and
other allowances in accordance with the Sastry Award in relation to C Class
Banks at least as from 16th April 1959.
BE
The All India Bank Employees Association has claimed as and by way
of interim relief 25 per cent of wages with a minimum of Rs. 25 per month for
all workmen employed in all the Banks covered by the above Reference. The
All India Bank Employees Federation have demanded 25 per cent of the
wages as and by way of interim relief for all workmen. The State Bank of
India Employees Association, Bengal Circle has claimed a sum of Rs. 25
per month by way of interim relief for the workmen of the Bengal Circle of the
State Bank of India with retrospective effect from such date as the Tribunal
may deem fit and proper. The State Bank of India Staff Union, Andhra Pradesh,
Vijayawada, has claimed the following by way of interim relief :
(1)
What all has been granted to the Award Staff under the Award
should be secured to them as a first measure of interim relief.
(ii)
AI
(i)
(iii) The State Bank has been responsible to produce and develop the
21 days strike of State Bank Employees in March I960 culminating
in the constitution of this Tribunal. The responsibility of the State
Bank therefore may be assessed and the Bank directed to pay the
employees their wages for the strike period as a third measure of
interim relief.
(iv)
In defiance of the principles of the award the State Bank has been
resorting to illegal and unfair labour practices, even involving the
Bank in illegal payments and consequent expenditure and loss.
Such illegal and unfair practices may be forbidden and status quo
ordered to be restored as a fourth measure of interim relief.
By the expression Award the State Bank of India Staff Union, Andhra
Pradesh, Vijayawada, mean the Award of the Tribunal (referred to for brevity
475
476
On hearing the parties, I find that the very basis on which the present
wage structure rests has been challenged on behalf of the workmen as well
as the Banks, though they pull in different directions. Some of the principle
taken into account in framing the existing wage structure are disputed. Some
banks who are parties to the Reference are not governed by the provisions of
the Sastry Award as modified by the decision of the Labour Appellate Tribunal
and as further modified by the Industrial Disputes (Banking Companies)
Decisions Act, 1955 (XLI of 1955). There is hardly any data which has been
accepted or agreed upon by both the workmen and employers which could
be relied upon for the purpose of granting Interim relief in the present case.
Enough material has not been placed before me to warrant the grant of
interim relief.After the matters have been heard fully, if the case warrants, a
provision can be made for giving effect to some of the provisions of the Award
from a date earlier than the date of the Award.
I am not discussing at present the various matters which have been
argued at some length before me, but not fully and without adequate materials,
as that may lend to prejudice the main hearing of the Reference before me.
On the materials placed before me, I am unable to give any interim relief.
BE
The hearing of the main reference has, commenced from 21st November
I960 and is going on from day to day. At the rate at which the matters are at
present progressing, it will not be long before the final award in the main
Reference is given.
Some of the Banks have been upgraded since the coming into effect of
the provisions of the Sastry Award as modified by the decision of the Labour
Appellate Tribunal and as further modified by the Industrial Disputes (Banking
Companies) Decisions Act, 1955 (XLI of 1955).
AI
477
478
APPENDIX D
BEFORE THE NATIONAL INDUSTRIAL TRIBUNAL (BANK DISPUTES),
AT BOMBAY
The State Bank of India Employees Association (Bengal and Delhi Circles)
versus
Applicant
The State Bank of India
(6) Miscellaneous Application No. 218 of 1960,
dated 9th July 1960
versus
Vijayawada
Applicant
Opponents
Applicant
Opponent
versus
Opponent
Opponents
479
...Applicant
versus
Opponent
versus
versus
The State Bank of India
Applicant
AI
Opponent
Opponents
BE
versus
Applicant
versus
Opponent
480
Applicant
versus
The Indian Overseas Bank Ltd. ...
Opponent
(4)
Applicant
(5)
(6)
versus
The Bank of Baroda Ltd.
Opponent
(7)
(8)
Applicant
versus
Opponents
BE
(9)
(10)
(11)
(12)
(13)
APPEARANCES:
AI
INDUSTRY : BANKING
ORDER
481
482
and statements showing the total balance outstanding for refund as on 31st
December 1959 and statements showing the special provisions made, if
any, under any head not shown in the Balance Sheets upto the year 1959
and their total amounts standing at that date. The Indian Banks Association
has filed a reply thereto dated 6th July 1960. The Bombay Exchange Banks'
Association filed its reply on 6th July 1960. There are similar applications
made by the All India Bank Employees' Federation, the State Bank of India
Employees Association, (Bengal and Delhi Circles), the State Bank of India
Staff Union, Vijayawada, the All India State Bank of India Staff Federation,
the State Bank of India Staff Union, Madras Circle, the All India Bank of
Baroda Employees' Federation, the Vadodra Rajya Bank Nokar Sangh, the
Indian Overseas Bank Employees Union and the State Bank of Patiala (All
Cadres) Employees Association.
(3)
For the purposes of this section banking company shall have the
meaning assigned to it in the Industrial disputes Act, 1947.
After the enactment of this new section, numerous banks have claimed that
some of the documents sought to be produced and the information disclosed
thereby were of a confidential nature and that the production or inspection of
such documents and the furnishing or disclosure of such information would
involve the disclosure of information relating to reserves not shown as such
by the banks concerned in their published balance sheets or any particulars
not shown therein in respect of provisions made for bad and doubtful debts
and other usual or necessary provisions.
3. The applicants have challenged the validity of the new section 34A on
the ground that it violates the fundamental rights guaranteed by Article 14 of
the Constitution. Reliance has been placed on Article 13(2) of the Constitution
which lays down that the State shall not make any law which takes away or
abridges the rights conferred by Part III of the Constitution and that any law
made in contravention of that clause shall, to the extent of the contravention,
be void.
BE
2. After the applications were filed by the All India Bank Employees'
Association and the All India Bank Employees' Federation and after the replies
thereto were filed by the Indian Banks Association, and the Bombay
Exchange Banks' Association, a Bill was introduced in Parliament on 30th
July 1960 for amending the Banking Companies Act, 1949, by adding a new
section to that Act, viz., sec. 34A, Thereafter Parliament passed the Banking
Companies (Amendment) Act, 1960. The said Act received the assent of the
President on 26th August 1960. The newly added section 34A provides as
follows :
shall, after taking into account principles of sound banking and all
relevant circumstances concerning the banking company, furnish
to the authority a certificate stating that the authority shall not take
into account any amount as such reserves and provisions of the
banking company or may take them into account only to the extent
of the amount specified by it in the certificate, and the certificate of
the Reserve Bank on such question shall be final and shall not be
called in question in any such proceeding.
AI
(b)
(2)
(b)
determine the said question of law and return the case to the court
484
AI
BE
Article 228 speaks only of cases pending in a Court subordinate to the High
Court. A National Tribunal is not a Court subordinate to the High Court within
the meaning of article 228 and that article can in no way preclude the Tribunal
from determining the question relating to the validity of an enactment on the
ground that such enactment violates fundamental rights. The constitution
makers have drawn a clear and sharp distinction between Courts and
Tribunals. In the very preceding Article viz Article 227, it has been stated that
every High Court shall have super-intendence over all Courts and Tribunals
throughout the territories in relation to which it exercises judisdiction. If it
was the intention of Ihe Constitution makers that Tribunals should not
determine substantial questions of law as to the interpretation of the
Constitution, they would have stated so and would have provided the machinery
for the determination of such question. No provision anywhere appears in the
Constitution whereunder any case involving a substantial question of law as
to the interpretation of the Constitution pending before a Tribunal is liable to
be withdrawn. There is no provision whereunder such a question in such a
case may be determined by any other authority.In this connection reference
may also be made to Article 136 of the Constitution whereunder also a
distinction has been made between Courts and Tribunals and it is provided
that notwithstanding anything in the Chapter in which that Article appears,
the Supreme Court may, in its discretion, grant special leave to appeal from
any judgment, decree, determination sentence or order in any cause or matter
passed or made by any Court or Tribunal in the territory of India. In SubClause (2) of Article 136 also it is mentioned that nothing in clause (1) shall
apply to any judgment. determination sentence on order passed or made by
any court or tribunal constituted by or under any law relating to the Armed
Forces.
5. Article 13(2)of the Constitution lays down that any law made in
contravention of that clause shall, to the extent of the contravention, be void.
If any enactment is void under the provisions of Article 13, it is void for all
purposes. It cannot be treated as valid for the purpose of deciding matters
which came up for consideration before a National Tribunal. It is the duty of
the Tribunal, if it finds that any provision of any enactment violates any of the
fundamental rights guaranteed under Part III of the Constitution to consider it
to be void and not to proceed on the footing that it is valid.If the Tribunal did
not have the jurisdiction to decide whether any provision of law which violates
fundamental rights is void, then the result would be that the Tribunal may
have to decide questions relating to the rights and obligations of parties
appearing before it on the footing that the provisions of an enactment which
are void, are valid.There appears to be no justification for taking such a view.
485
from which the case has been so withdrawn together with a copy of
its judgment on such question, and the said court shall on receipt
thereof proceed to dispose of the case in conformity with such
judgment.
BE
AI
8. Shri Bhabha also relies upon the full bench case of The Public
Prosecutor vs. V. M. Ramalingam Pillai reported in 1958(2) Madras Law
Journal at page 243. It is a case under the Madras General Sales Tax Act.
The observations in that case relied upon by Shri Bhabha appear at page 254
and run as follows :
When a person is prosecuted under section 16-A of the General Sales
Tax Act it will not be open to him to raise any objection, plea or contention
which he could have raised before the authorities set up under the General
Sales Tax Act, it will be open to him to raise only those pleas, objections
and contentions which those authorities are precluded from entertaining.
One example of such a contention would be that the Act or any particular
provision of it is ultra vires.
9. Another decision relied upon by Shri Bhabha is the one reported in
1955 (2) Supreme Court Reports, p. 603 : The Bengal Immunity Company
Limited vs. The State of Bihar and others. In that case the Bihar Sales
Tax Act, 1947, was challenged on the ground that it violated some of the
fundamental rights guaranteed under the Constitution. Shri Bhabha relies
upon a passage in the dissenting judgment of Shri Justice Venkatarama
Ayyar appearing at page 765, which runs as follows :
487
11. This reasoning proceeds on the basis that the authorities constituted
under the Act would have a.right to decide the question relating to the
constitutionality of the impugned provision of the Act. In all the aforesaid
cases what the Courts had to consider was whether there was any bar to the
issue of a Writ by reason of the existence of an effective alternative remedy
provided by the Act whose validity itself was challenged.
12. Apart from any other consideration, the observations on which Shri
Bhabha relies, in my view, are not applicable at all to the facts of present
case. What the learned judges have said is that an authority constituted
under an enactment is not competent to decide the validity of the very
enactment under which that authority is constituted. In the present case, the
validity of the appointment of the National Tribunal is not disputed. No provisions
of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, under which this Tribunal is constituted,
are in any way challenged. What is challenged is the right of this Tribunal
constituted under the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, to decide whether a
provision of the Banking Companies Act, 1949, violates any fundamental
right guaranteed under the Constitution. Under the Industrial Disputes Act,
1947, authority has been conferred upon me to determine questions relating
to production of documents. The determination of the question whether the
provisions of section 34A of the Banking Companies Act, 1949, are valid or
not, is incidental to the effective exercise by me of my undisputed jurisdiction
to decide the question whether I should order discovery of particular documents
in this case or not. In my view, there is no merit in the contention that I have
no jurisdiction to decide whether the provisions contained in section 34A are
void on the ground that they offend the fundamental rights guaranteed under
Article 14 of the Constitution.
Companies Act, 1949, are void, on the ground that they violate the fundamental
rights guaranteed under Article 14 of the Constitution. Article 14 of the
Constitution provides that the State shall not deny to any person equality
before the law or the equal protection of the laws within the territory of India.
This Article has come up for consideration before the Supreme Court, on
numerous occasions and the law on the subject has been well-settled. I will
only refer to one recent case on the subject reported in 1959 Supreme Court
Reports p. 279: Shri Ram Krishna Dalmia vs. Shri Justice S. R. Tendolkar
and others. Chief Justice Das in that case observes at pages 296 and 297
as follows :
14. I shall now proceed to deal with the substantial question that has
been raised before me viz. whether the provisions of section 34A of the Banking
The learned Chief Justice thereafter proceeds to state that the decisions of
the Supreme Court further establish Inter alia that it must be presumed that
BE
AI
13. The next question that has been urged before me is that before I can
proceed to decide the question, notice must be given to the Attorney General
as required by Order 27A r 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure. That rule provides
as follows :
In any suit in which it appears to the Court that any such question
as is referred to in clause 1 of Article 132 read with Article 147 of
the Constitution is involved, the Court shall not proceed to determine
that question until after the notice has been given to the Attorney
General for India, if the question of law concerns the Central
Government and to the Advocate General of the State if the question
of law concerns a State Government.
489
490
to (a) any reserves not shown as such in its published balance sheet or (b)
any particulars not shown therein (i.e. in the published balance sheet) in
respect of provisions made for bad and doubtful debts and other usual or
necessary provisions. The words quoted above in respect of item (b) are
referrable to similar words appearing in Form B in the Third Schedule of the
Banking Companies Act, 1949.
17. By section 34A (2) a provision is made for a certificate from the
Reserve Bank as regards the amount that may be taken into account by the
authority concerned out of the reserves or provisions referred to in sub-section
(1). The certificate of the Reserve Bank on such question is made final. Such
certificate is to be given when such a question arises in relation to a banking
company other than the Reserve Bank. There is no universally recognized
principle that a party to a proceeding pending in a Court or before a Tribunal
or other authority has the right of obtaining discovery and inspection of
documents in the possession of any other party thereto or is entitled to the
disclosure of any information in the possession of the other party. The right of
discovery and inspection and the submission of interogatories is confined
mainly to Civil Courts. No such right exists in Criminal Courts. No such right
exists in connection with proceedings before various authorities constituted
under various enactments. Section 11 of the Industrial Disputes Act by subsection (3) provides that every Board, Court, Labour Court, Tribunal and
National Tribunal shall have the same powers as are vested in a Civil Court
under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 when trying a suit, in respect of
compelling the production of documents and material objects. If such a provision
was absent in the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, it could not have been said
that the Act was invalid to any extent by reason of such absence.It was open
to the legislature to provide that the authorities under the Industrial Disputes
Act, 1947, should have the powers referred to in that section. It was equally
open to that very legislature to put restrictions on such powers, if it felt that it
was expedient to do so.Even where a right is conferred upon parties in
proceedings in Civil Courts to compel production of documents, that right is
not an absolute right. That right is limited by the privilege conferred by the
legislature against such discovery and production in respect of certain
documents.It is open to the legislature to extend that privilege to other
documents.The legislature by enacting section 34A has sought Inter alia to
put a restriction on the right conferred by section 11 of the Industrial Disputes
Act, 1947.
BE
the legislature understands and correctly appreciates the need of its own
people, that its laws are directed to problems made manifest by experience,
that its discriminations are based on adequate grounds and that the legislature
is free to recognise degrees of harm and may confine its restrictions to those
cases where the need is deemed to be the clearest. He further observes that
in determining the question of the validity or otherwise of such a statute the
Court will not strike down the law out of hand only because no classification
appears on its face or because a discretion is given to the Government to
make the selection or classification but will go on to examine and ascertain
if the statute has laid down any principle or policy for the guidance of the
exercise of discretion by the Government in the matter of the selection or
classification. After such scrutiny the Court will strike down the statute if it
does not lay down any principle or policy for guiding the exercise of discretion
by the Government in the matter of selection or classification, on the ground
that the statute provides for the delegation of arbitrary and uncontrolled power
to the Government so as to enable it to discriminate between persons or
things similarly situate and that, therefore, the discrimination is inherent in
the statute itself. In such a case the court will strike down both the law as
well as the executive action taken under such law. He further observes that a
statute may not make a classification of the persons or things for the purpose
of applying its provisions made for bad and doubtful debts and other usual or
necessary provisions to classify the persons or things to whom its provisions
are to apply, but may at the same time lay down a policy or principle for the
guidance of the exercise of discretion by the Government in the matter of
such selection or classification, then the court will uphold the law as
constitutional.
AI
15. I shall now proceed to examine the provisions of section 34A of the
Act wtith a view to see if the well-recognised tests as laid down by the
Supreme Court have been satisfied.
16. Section 34A (1) deals with production of documents, giving inspection
of documents, the furnishing of statements and the disclosure of information
by a banking company. For this purpose the term banking company, by
reason of the provisions of sub-section (3) of section 34A means a company
which transacts the business of banking in India having branches or other
establishments in more than one State and includes the Reserve Bank of
India, the State Bank of India and any subsidiary bank as defined in the State
Bank of India (Subsidiary Banks Act, 1959). It is confined to proceedings
under the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, or in any Appeal or other proceedings
arising therefrom or connected therewith. It imposes a limitation upon the
powers of the authority before which such proceeding is pending. It comes
into operation when the banking company claims (I) that such document,
statement or information is of a confidential nature and (2) that the production
or inspection of such document, or the furnishing or disclosure of such
statement or information would involve the disclosure of information relating
491
18. It is urged on behalf of the applicants that by this section classifications have been made without the same being founded on any intelligible
differentia which would distinguish persons or things that are grouped together
from others left out of the group. It is urged that a favourable treatment is
given to banking companies as compared to other companies and that even
amongst banking companies, the Reserve Bank is treated differently from
other banks. It is further urged that the authorities constituted under the
492
AI
BE
The legislature may well have thought that in proceedings before the
authorities constituted under the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, where a banking
company having branches or other establishments in more than one State is
a party, the number of persons appearing may be very large and found it
necessary to prevent the disclosure of certain documents, statements and
information of a confidential nature in the public interest. The legislature may
well have considered the degree of harm caused by such disclosure and
found the need for such restriction to be the clearest and the greatest.
20. As regards the distinction made between the Reserve Bank and
other banking companies in section 34A(2), there is good reason for doing
so. The Reserve Bank itself is constituted the authority to issue the certificates
referred to in that Sub-section and the legislature could well provide that it is
not to issue a certificate about itself. As regards the contention that the
authorities constituted under the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, are
discriminated against, it is clear from the provisions of that section that the
same are applicable to all authorities before which the proceedings therein
referred to may be pending. The proceedings therein referred to are: (1) any
proceeding under the industrial Disputes Act, 1947, (ii) any appeal arising
therefrom or connected therewith, and (iii) any other proceeding arising
therefrom or connected therewith. There is no provision for any appeal under
the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947. An appeal from the award of any Tribunal
under the Act lies under Article 136 of the Constitution to the Supreme Court.
The provisions of section 34A would be applicable to the Supreme Court even
though it is not an authority constituted under the industrial Disputes Act.
493
whether the claim as made is well founded or not. The claim being a claim in
respect of matters not shown in the published balance sheet, the legislature
may well have considered that the checks provided in the Banking Companies
Act, 1949, in connection therewith may be a sufficient safeguard and may
have considered that the disclosure of such documents, statements or
information for the objective determination by anybody or tribunal may do
more harm than good. As observed by the Supreme Court, it must be
presumed that the legislature understands and correctly appreciates the needs
of its own people and that its laws are directed to problems made manifest
by experience and that its discriminations are based on adequate grounds.In
my view, the provisions of Article 14 cannot be considered to be violated by
reason of the fact that the grant of the privilege under that section rests on a
bare claim being made by a banking company.
AI
BE
23. It is next contended that the provisions contained in the section are
extremely vague.Item (b) in that section refers to particulars not shown in the
published balance sheet in respect of other usual or necessary provisions.It
is urged that the word usual conveys no definite meaning. It may cover what
may not be usual to the banking industry as such, but may be usual to a
particular bank. It is urged that the words necessary provisions are equally
words of uncertain import, inasmuch as the question as to what may be
considered necessary may depend upon the subjective view of the person
preparing the balance sheet. One thing to be borne in mind in this connection
is that the claim that is required to be made must be a claim in respect of a
document, statement or information of a confidential nature. If the particulars
which are not shown in the balance-sheet are not of a confidential nature,
then the privilege is not liable to be claimed in connection therewith. The
language used by the legislature is intended to cover only those matters
which a banking company is entitled to exclude from its published balance
sheet having regard to the provisions contained in section 29 of the Banking
Companies Act. 1949, and the forms prescribed thereunder. The words
provision made during the year for bad and doubtful debts and other usual or
necessary provisions appear in Form B in the Third Schedule to that Act.
Similar words in section 34A bear the same meaning as the words used in
Form B. These words have a definite meaning in the context of the Banking
Companies Act and are not so nebulous as to render the provisions of the
enactment invalid.
25. It is then urged that the Reserve Bank is interested in the disputes
referred to me in this Reference, that it has a bias in favour of the banks and
that it is not a proper entity to be constituted the authority under the Act for
the issue of such certificates. Reliance has been placed in this connection
on the observations of the House of Lords in the case of Dimes vs. Proprietor
of Grand Junction Canal reported in 3 House of Lords Cases, p. 759 at p.
793 and on the observations in the case of Fanagan vs Kernan appearing in
8 Law Reports Ireland p. 44 at page 48, where it has been laid down that no
man should be made a judge in his own cause. Reliance is also placed upon
the decision in the case The King vs. Sussex Justices, reported in 1924 (1)
K.B. p. 256 and the case reported in 1926 Appeal Cases p. 586 Frome
United Breweries Company Limited and another vs. Keepers of the
Peace and Justices for County Borough of Bath. In the last case in the
speech of Viscount Cave at page 590 it has been observed as follows :
My Lords, if there is one principle which forms an integral part of
the English Law, it is that every member of a body engaged in a
judicial proceeding must be able to act judicially; and it has been
held over and over again that, if a member of such a body is subject
to a bias (whether financial or other) in favour of or against either
party to the dispute or is in such a position that a bias must be
assumed, he ought not to take part in the decision or even to sit
upon the tribunal. This rule has been asserted not only in the case
of Courts of Justice and other judicial tribunals but in the case of
authorities which, though in no sense to be called Courts, have to
act as judges of the rights of others.
24. Under sub-section (2) of section 34A the Reserve Bank has been
constituted the authority for the purpose of issuing the certificates therein
mentioned. It is urged that there is no guiding principle laid down to govern
the action of the Reserve Bank in issuing such certificates. The words used
in the section are the Reserve Bank shall, after taking into account principles
of sound banking and all relevant circumstances concerning the banking
company, furnish to the authority a certificate. It is urged tnat the words
principles of sound banking are words of uncertain import and what one
495
496
urged that the Reserve Bank of India is interested in the result of the present
Reference as the decision given in respect of some of the questions in this
reference may have an influence on the decision of the questions which are
to come up for consideration in Reference No. 2 of 1960 in connection with
the dispute between the Reserve Bank of India and its workmen. In answer to
this argument, Shri Bhabha, the learned counsel for some of the Banks
contents that the principle concerning bias is not one which is applicable to
all tribunals and authorities. He referred to a decision of the House of Lords in
Franklin and others vs. Minister of Town and Country Planning, reported
in 1948 Appeal Cases p. 87. In that case Lord Thankerton in the course of his
speech at page 103 observes as follows :
28. In the present case, the Reserve Bank has not exercised any judicial
or quasi-judicial function in issuing a certificate.Apart from that, the legislature
has thought it fit to confer authority on the Reserve Bank of India to issue the
certificates in question.The authority conferred upon the Reserve Bank is a
statutory authority and being a statutory authority it is not liable to be
challenged on the ground of bias. In my view, the argument based on the
footing of bias is not sustainable in law. In my view, the classifications that
have been made by the legislature in enacting section 34A are founded on an
intelligible differentia distinguishing the banking companies referred to therein
from other companies and distinguishing the authorities referred to therein
from other authorities.The differentia has a rational relation to the object sought
to be achieved by the statute viz., the non-disclosure in the public interest
and in the interest of the banking system, of the country of the particulars
referred to in section 34A. There is a clear nexus between the basis of
classification and the object of the Act under consideration.The attack upon
the constitutionality of Section 34A based on the ground that it is violative of
the fundamental rights guaranteed under Article 14 of the Constitution must,
therefore, fail.
AI
BE
My Lords, I could wish that the use of the word bias should be
confined to its proper sphere. Its proper significance, in my opinion,
is to denote a departure from the standard of even-handed justice
which the law requires from those who occupy judicial office, or
those who are commonly regarded as holding a quasi-judicial office,
such as an arbitrator. The reason for this clearly is that, having to
adjudicate as between two or more parties, he must come to his
adjudication with an independent mind, without any inclination or
bias towards one side or other in the dispute. As Lord Cranworth L.
C. says in Ranger v. Western Ry. Co. (5 M.L.C. 72, 89) A judge
ought to be and is supposed to be in deferent between the parties.
He has, or is supposed to have, no bias inducing him to lean to the
one side rather than to the other. In ordinary cases it is a just
ground of exception to a judge that he is not indifferent, and the
fact that he is himself a party, or interested as a party, affords the
strongest proof that he cannot be indifferent. To this may be added
the statement by Lord Hewart C. J. in Rex vs. Sussex. Justices.
Ex-parte McCarthy [1924 (1)K.B. 256, 258]: It is said, and no
doubt, truly, that when that gentleman (the deputy clerk) retired in
the unusual way with the justices, taking with him the notes of the
evidence in case the justices might desire to consult him the justices
came to a conclusion without consulting him and that he
scrupulously abstained from referring to the case in any way. But
while that is so, a long line of cases shows that it is not merely of
some importance but is of fundamental importance that justice
should not only be done, but should manifestly and undoubtedly
be seen to be done. The question therefore is not whether in this
case the deputy clerk made any observation or offered any criticism
which he might not properly have made or offered; the question is
whether he was so related to the case in its civil aspect as to be
unfit to act as clerk to the justices in the criminal matter. The
answer to that question depends not upon what actually was done
but upon what might appear to be done. This was followed in Rex
497
29. The next argument that is urged on behalf of the applicants is that
assuming that section 34A of the Act is valid, its provisions are not applicable
to the present proceedings for production of documents, which are pending
before me. It is urged that this piece of legislation must be considered to be
prospective in its operation.It is urged that Reference No. 1 of 1960, which
has been made by the Central Government on 21st March I960, was a reference
made prior to the coming into force of the Banking Companies (Amendment)
Act, 1960, and that the provisions of the amending Act cannot be made
applicable to proceeding which had already commenced prior to the coming
into force of the amendment Reliance. In this connection is placed upon
certain passages from Maxwell on the interpretation of Statutes, 10th Edition,
at p. 221. It has been stated there as follows ;
In general, when the law is altered during the pendency of an action,
498
The principle which their Lordships must apply in dealing with this
matter has been authoritatively enunciating by the Board in the
Colonial Sugar Refining Co. vs. Irving (1905) A.C. 369) where it is in
effect laid down that, while provisions of a statue dealing merely
with matters of procedure may properly, unless that construction
be textually inadmissible, have retrospective effect attributed to
them, provisions which touch a right in existence at the passing of
the statute are not to be applied retrospectively in the absence of
express enactment or necessary intendment. Their Lordships can
have no doubt that provisions which, if applied retrospectively, would
deprive of their existing finality orders which, when the statute came
into force, were final, are provisions which touch existing rights
32. Another decision to which my attention was drawn is the one reported
in 1957 Supreme Court Reports, p. 488 in the case of Garikapatti Veeraya
vs. N. Subbiah Chaudhary. In the course of his judgement Chief Justice
Das refers to the aforesaid case of Colonial Sugar Refining Company Ltd.,
vs. Irving, and quotes the aforesaid observations of Lord Blanesburgh as
laying down the law on the subject.
BE
In the present case, no orders for production had been passed by me prior to
the coming into force of the Banking Companies (Amendment) Act, I960. No
question of finality of orders, therefore, arises.
AI
30. The leading case on the subject is the case of The Colonial Sugar
Refining Company Limited vs. Irving, reported in 1905 Appeal Cases p.
369. In that case it was held that although the right of appeal from the Supreme
Court of Queensland to His Majesty in Council had been taken away by the
Australian Commonwealth Judiciary Act, 1903, yet the Act was not
retrospective and a right of appeal to the King in Council in a suit pending
when the Act was passed and decided by the Supreme Court afterwards was
not taken away. Lord Macnaghten in delivering the judgment of the Privy
Council observes at page 372 as follows :
As regards the general principles applicable to the case, there
was no controversy. On the one hand, it was not disputed that if
the matter in question be a matter of procedure only, the petition is
well founded. On the other hand, if it be more than a matter of
procedure, if it touches a right in existence at the passing of the
Act, it was conceded that, in accordance with a long line of
authorities extending from the time of Lord Coke to the present
day, the appellants would be entitled to succeed.
He held in that case that there was an interference with existing rights.
31. Reference was also made to the decision of the Privy Council in
Delhi Cloth and General Mills Company, Limited vs. Income Tax
Commissioner Delhi and another, reported in 54 Indian Appeals p. 421.
Lord Blanesburgh in delivering the judgement of the Privy Council observes at
page 425 as under :
499
33. The question that I have to consider is whether the Applicants had
any existing vested rights when the amending Act was passed. The law is
now well-settled that no person has a vested right in a particular procedure.
The right which is sought to be claimed is a right to claim production of
documents having regard to the provisions contained in section 11 of the
Industrial Disputes Act. It is urged that the said right to obtain production has
been interferred with during the pendency of the present proceedings. That
right has now been limited so as to exclude discovery of documents,
statements or information of the kind mentioned in section 34A on a claim
being made by a banking company as provided in that section. The right to
claim discovery, inspection and disclosure of information may be a valuable
right but it is a right appertaining to the realm of procedure and not a vested
right. In the absence of any other indication, a legislative provision in that
connection has to be construed as being applicable to proceedings pending
at the date when such provision came into force. It has been strongly urged
by Shri Bhabha, that it is not necessary in this case to resort to any of the
aforesaid canons of construction for the purpose of considering whether the
new section is operative in connection with proceedings which had already
been instituted prior to the coming into force thereof. In his submission, the
language of section 34A is clear and covers proceedings which were pending
at the date when the Banking Companies (Amendment) Act, I960, came into
force. In his submission, the words before which such proceeding is pending
are already intended to cover all pending proceedings, whether instituted
500
the statute are ambiguous or vague that resort may be had to them
for the purpose of arriving at the true intention of the legislature."
In my view, both on the ground of the language used by the legislature and
the ground of the application of the well known canons of construction
provisions of section 34A are applicable to the applications which have been
made before me for production of documents in the present Reference.
35. Shri Nargolkar, the learned counsel for the All India Bank Employees
Association, has strongly relied upon the decision reported in 39 Times Law
Reports p. 128 : in the case of Beadling and others vs. Goll. In that case it
was held that the provision in section 1 of the Gaming Act, 1922, that no
action for the recovery of money under section 2 of the Gaming Act 1835,
shall be entertained in any Court was not retrospective in regard to action
which had been commenced before the passing of the Act and in which
judgment had not been given when the Act came into force. This decision
turned upon the language used by the legislature. He also relied upon the
decision in the case of Bireswar Moral and another vs. Indu Bhushan
Kindu and others, reported in A.I.R. 1943, Ca. 573 at p. 574. In that case,
a Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court held that when the legislature
altered the rights of parties by taking away or conferring any right of action,
its enactments, unless in express terms they apply to pending actions, do
not affect them. They held that there was an exception to this rule, namely,
where enactments merely affected procedure, and did not extend to rights of
action. They further held that if a statute dealt merely with the procedure in
an action, and did not affect the rights of the parties, it will be held to apply
prima facie to all actions, pending as well as future. Whether a person has
a right to recover property is a question of substantive law. But in what Court
he must institute proceedings is a question of procedural law.
BE
before or after the coming into force of the Banking Companies (Amendment)
Act, 1960. Shri Kavlekar has on the other hand, equally strongly urged that
the words before which such proceeding is pending are not really
determinative of the question whether the section is applicable to proceedings
which had been instituted before the commencement of the Banking
Companies (Amendment) Act, 1960 or to the proceedings instituted after
such commencement. He says that whenever a claim is made under the
section, a proceeding must be pending. The very making of the claim in a
proceeding postulates the pendency of a proceeding. He contends that the
section cannot be given a retrospective effect so as to deprive persons of
their existing rights. In my view, the language used by the legislature is such
that having regard to its plain meaning it applies to proceedings which have
been instituted before the coming into force of the Banking Companies
(Amendment) Act, 1960 and to proceedings which may be instituted after
the coming into force thereof. There is nothing to indicate that the legislature
intended to exclude proceedings which had been instituted before the coming
into force of the amending Act. The amendment was made in the public
interest and in the interest of the banking system of the country. If a reference
is made to the statement of objects and reasons in the case of ambiguity,
the intention of the legislature as disclosed therein seems to me to be clear.
It was in order to serve the public interest and the interest of the banking
system of the country that the disclosure was sought to be prevented. The
object would not be fully and eflectively served by restricting the operation of
the Act to proceedings commenced after the coming into force of the Act.
AI
36. Shri Nargolkar relied upon the decision reported in 1909 (1) K.B p.
310 : Smithies vs. National Association of Operative Plasterers and
others and urged that vested rights had accrued in the present case and as
such rights had accrued, those rights cannot be taken away unless the
legislature indicated that the amending act was to be retrospective in operation.
Vaughan Williams L. J. in the aforesaid case observed at page 319 as follows:We are all agreed on this point. It is a proposition founded in common
sense that, where vested rights have already accrued, and legislation
is passed which uses words expressive of futurity, such as shall
or shall not which prima facie would appear to be meant to be
applicable to future cases, it is not to be constructed retrospectively
so as to affect those vested rights, unless terms are used which
clearly compel the Court to give it that construction. This is only to
impute common sense to the Legislature; any reasonable person
would say that clear terms ought to be used, if it is intended to
divest a vested right. It is stated in Maxwell on the Interpretation of
502
APPENDIX E
BEFORE THE NATIONAL INDUSTRIAL TRIBUNAL (BANK DISPUTES)
AT BOMBAY
Applicant
versus
The State Bank of India ... ...
Opponent.
BE
37. There is one more argument which was urged before me. It was
urged that the Banking Companies (Amendment) Act, 1960, is really a
declaratory Act, and reliance was sought to be placed upon what is stated in
the statement of objects and reasons. It is there stated that the new section
was proposed to be inserted to make it clear that information, which according
to the law is not required to be published in the balance sheet or profit and
loss accounts of a banking company need not be disclosed to the various
authorities under the Industrial Disputes Act. It will not be proper for me to
refer to the statement of objects and reasons for the purpose of determining
whether a particular Act is declaratory or not. I asked counsel who were
appearing for the banks to point out any provision of any other law which
conferred this privilege upon the banking companies and which prevented the
production and inspection of such documents and the disclosure of such
statements or information, but so far, my attention has not been drawn to any
such provision. I am not inclined to regard the Act as merely declaratory of
existing rights.
AI
38. It was urged by Shri Nargolkar that by sub-section (2) of section 34A
a change has been effected in the forum as regards the determination of the
question about the amount that may be taken into account out of the reserves
and provisions referred to in section 34A (1) and that the provisions are not
retrospective. In my view, what has been done by the provisions of subsection (2) of section 34A is to provide conclusive evidence of certain matters
without further investigation by the tribunal. The Reserve Bank in issuing a
certificate has not to exercise any judicial or quasijudicial functions. Such
change by the legislature cannot be regarded as constituting a change of
forum during the pendency of any proceedings.
39. In view of what I have stated above, I hold that the Banking companies
are entitled in the present proceedings pending before me to make the claim
referred to in section 34A(1) of the Banking Companies (Amend ment) Act,
1960.
KANTILAL T. DESAl,
Presiding Officer,
National Industrial Tribunal,
(Bank Disputes), Bombay-1
APPEARANCES:
Shri S. Laxminarasinham for the Applicant.
503
504
Craigie Blunt & Caroe, Solicitors, for the Miraj State Bank Ltd.
no case has been made out for adding the Reserve Bank of India as a party
to the Reference.
Shri H. K. Sowani, Advocate, for the All India Bank of Baroda Employees
Federation and for Indian Overseas Bank Employees Union.
No appearance for the All India Reserve Bank D Class Employees
Union
Bombay, 18th November 1960
ORDER
BE
INDUSTRY: BANKING
Shri S. S. Kavlekar, Advocate, for the All India Bank of India Staff
Federation.
AI
3. It is urged on behalf of the State Bank of India and the Reserve Bank
of India that the Tribunal has no jurisdiction to add the Reserve Bank of India
as a party to Reference No. 1 of 1960. It is also contended that on the merits
505
(a)
(b)
(2)
(a)
between the Reserve Bank and the State Bank and attributable
to the branches established in pursuance of sub-section (5)
of section 16;
(aa) subsidies granted by the State Bank to a subsidiary Bank
with the approval of the Reserve Bank; and
(b)
(3)
(a)
(b)
(2)
(3)
(4)
Reliance has also been placed on sub-sections (3) and (5) of section 16 of
the Act, which provides as follows :
(3)
(4)
(5)
AI
Section 18 of the Act, which has been relied upon, provides that in the
discharge of its functions including those relating to a subsidiary bank, the
State Bank shall be guided by such directions in matters of policy involving
public interest as the Central Government may, in consultation with the
Governor of the Reserve Bank and the Chairman of the State Bank, give to it.
Sections 32 and 50 of the Act, which have also been invoked in support of the
application, provide as follows :
32. (1)
50
BE
16
(1)
(2)
(n)
(o)
6. None of these provisions in any manner establish that the State Bank
of India is the same as the Reserve Bank of India or that the name State
Bank of India is only a pseudonym or an alias for the Reserve Bank of India.
Section 32 itself contains provisions relating to a dispute between the
StateBank and the Reserve Bank. The State Bank is required to act as the
Agent of the Reserve Bank as provided in the said section. The Reserve
Bank no doubt is interested in the State Bank. The Reserve Bank is required
to be consulted in connection with various matters relating to the State Bank.
508
AI
BE
7. In the course of the hearing before me, it was argued that even though
the State Bank and the Reserve Bank may not be the same, yet the Reserve
Bank should be added as a party to the Reference as a proper party to the
same. In this connection, in addition to the aforesaid provisions of the State
Bank of India Act, 1955, reference was made to section 10(1) (b) (iii) of the
Banking Companies Act, 1949, whereunder it is provided that no banking
company shall employ or continue the employment of any person whose
remuneration is, in the opinion of the Reserve Bank, excessive. For the purpose
of showing that the Tribunal has jurisdiction to do so, reliance has been
placed upon the provisions contained in sub-section (3) of section 18 of the
Industrial Disputes Act. By that section it is provided as under :
18 (1) *
* *
(2) *
* *
(3) A settlement arrived at in the course of conciliation proceedings
under this Act or an award of a Labour Court. Tribunal or
National Tribunal which has become enforceable shall be
binding on
(a) all parties to the industrial dispute;
(b) all other parties summoned to appear in the proceedings as
parties to the dispute, unless the Board, Labour Court, Tribunal
or Nationai Tribunal, as the case may be, records the opinion
that they were so summoned without proper cause;
(c) where a party referred to in clause (a) or clause (b) is an
employer, his heirs, successors or assigns in respect of the
establishment to which the dispute relates;
(d) where a party referred to in clause (a) or clause (b) is composed
of workmen, all persons who were employed in the
establishment or part of the establishment, as the case may
be, to which the dispute relates on the date of the dispute and
all persons who subsequently become employed in that
establishment or part
It is urged that sub-section 3(b) refers to persons other than persons named
as parties to the industrial disputes.It is urged that the sub-section 3(b) clearly
indicates that a National Tribunal has jurisdiction to summon a person to
appear in the proceedings as a party to the dispute even though that person
may not have been named in the reference as a party to the same. It is urged
that in connection with adding parties, a National Tribunal has the same
powers as those possessed by a Civil Court under the provisions contained
in Order 1 rule 10 of the Code of Civil Procedure and that the Reserve Bank of
India being vitally interested in the State Bank of India would be a proper
party to Reference No. I of 1960 and should be brought on record as a party
That, however, does not in any sense mean that the Reserve Bank and the
State Bank are the same. They are distinct and separate entities constituted
under different enactments.
509
Subject to the provision of this Act and of any rules made thereunder,
every election petition shall be tried by the Tribunal, as nearly as
may be, in accordance with the procedure applicable under the
Code of Civil Procedure, to the trial of suits."
After considering the meaning of the expression shall be tried by the Tribunal,
having regard to the wording used in that sub-section, the Court held that the
Election Tribunal had power to add parties to the election petition. That decision
turns upon the provisions contained in section 90 (2) of the Representation of
the People Act and does not give much guidance in determining the question
raised before me.
AI
BE
10. It has been strongly urged before me that the provisions of Order 1,
rule 10 are not applicable to the proceedings before me and that I have no
jurisdiction to make an order of the nature asked for by the applicant, in
answer to this argument Shri S. Laximinarasinham strongly relied upon two
decisions of the Madras High Court. The first decision relied upon by him is
the one reported in 1954 I. L.L.J. 295 : Radhakrishna Mills Ltd. vs. Industrial
Tribunal, Madras and others. In that case Mr. Justice P. Govinda Menon
held that section 18(b) of the Act necessarily implied that parties other than
the original parties to an industrial dispute could be summoned as parties to
the proceeding. He held that, therefore, by necessary implication there was
vested in the Industrial Tribunal a power to add any person or establishment
whose presence was necessary, or proper for the due and just adjudication
of the disputes and make them parties to the proceeding He further held that
clause (b) of sect ion 18 when it spoke of all other parties summoned to
appear in the proceedings as parties to the dispute, necessarily implied
some persons other than the original parties to the dispute or persons whom
the State Government had subsequently added under section10(5) summoned
to appear in order that the award may become enforceable and binding on
those parties also. He held that section 18(b) is similar to order 1 rule 10(2)
of the Civil Procedure Code.
mean persons who are affected by or interested in the dispute i.e. necessary
or proper parties. They have observed that section 18(b) though apparently
wide in terms was intended to take only necessary or proper parties and
would not include parties against whom no relief was claimed or whose
presence was not necessary for adjudicating the dispute between the parties.
13. It has been strongly urged on behalf of the State Bank of India and
the Reserve Bank of India that the National Tribunal has not the same powers
as regards addition of parties which a Civil Court has under the provisions
contained in Order 1, rule 10 of the Code of Civil Procedure. My attention has
been drawn to the provisions contained in section 11(3) of the Industrial
Disputes Act where the legislature has in express terms provided that a
National Tribunal would have the same powers as are vested in a Civil Court
under Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, when trying a suit in respect of the
matters therein set out. Addition of parties is not one of the matters set out in
that sub-section. The question raised before me, however, is whether such a
power can be said to have been conferred by necessary implication having
regard to the language used in section 18 of the Industrial Disputes Act
1947. Sub-section (3) of section 18 refers to four different categories of persons
who would be bound by the award of a National Tribunal. Sub-section (b)
refers to all other parties summoned to appear in the proceedings as parties
to the dispute. This expression must of necessity refer to parties other than
the parties referred to in sub-section (a). From this it must follow by necessary
implication that a National Tribunal would have power to summon a person to
appear as a party to the dispute even though that person may not be a party
to the industrial dispute mentioned in the reference. Such a person would be
bound by the Award made by the National Tribunal unless the National Tribunal
512
APPENDIX F
BEFORE THE NATIONAL INDUSTRIAL TRIBUNAL (BANK
DISPUTES) AT BOMBAY
Miscellaneous Application No. 1 of 1961
in
Reference No, 1 of I960
(1) The State Bank of India Staff Union, Andhra Pradesh, Vijayawada.
(2) The State Bank of India Staff Union,Madras Circle, Madras ...
Petitioners
versus
PRESENT :
The Honourable Shri Justice Kantilal T. Desai, Presiding Officer, National
Industrial Tribunal (Bank Disputes), Bombay.
BE
recorded the opinion that such a person was summoned without proper cause.
The question would still survive whether a National Tribunal has the same
powers which a Civil Court has in connection with the addition of parties
under the provisions contained in Order 1, rule 10 of the Code of Civil
Procedure. It is urged that there are two distinctive features which distinguish
a suit from a proceeding before a National Tribunal. The proceedings in a Civil
Court can be instituted at the volition of a party. The proceedings before a
National Tribunal can only be instituted on a reference made by the Central
Government. When a matter is instituted in a Court of law, it is instituted
ordinarily for the adjudication of existing rights and obligations between the
parties. The dispute that may be referred to a National Tribunal may or may
not relate to the enforcement of existing rights and obligations. A dispute
may be referred to a National Tribunal for the purpose of laying down fresh
terms of employment between an employer and his employees. Under the
provisions of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 a National Tribunal has power
by its award to lay down terms and conditions which would bind the employers
and employees and to create new rights and obligations. It is not necessary
for the purpose of the present proceedings to decide whether the power is
similar to the power exercised by a Civil Court under the Code of Civil
Procedure. Suffice it to say that there is no power in the National Tribunal to
add a person as a party to the dispute merely because that party is in some
way interested in the dispute.
14. In the result, the application fails and is dismissed.
AI
KANTILAL T. DESAI
Presiding Officer,
National Industrial Tribunal,
(Bank Disputes), Bombay-1.
APPEARANCES:
Shri Laxminarsinham for the Petitioners.
Shri P. P. Khamtala instructed by Shri R. Setlur of Messrs. Crawford Bayley
& Company, Solicitors, for the Respondent.
INDUSTRY : BANKING.
1. The State Bank of India Staff Union, Andhra Pradesh, and the State
Bank of India Staff Union, Madras Circle, have filed an application before me
for the issue of summons to the Reserve Bank of India, Bombay, directing
the Reserve Bank of India to produce through any of its employees the returns
submitted by the State Bank of India to the Reserve Bank of India under
sections 25 and 27 of the Banking Companies Act during the years 1955 to
1960. It is stated that the said documents are relevant and essential for the
decision of the dispute between the State Bank of India and its workmen
pending before this Tribunal.
2. Section 25 (2) of the Banking Companies Act lays down that every
banking company shall, within one month from the end of every quarter submit
to the Reserve Bank a return in the prescribed form and manner of the assets
and liabilities referred to in sub-section (1) as at the close of business or the
last Friday of the previous quarter, or, if that Friday is a public holiday under
the Negotiable Instruments Act. 1881 (26 of 1881), at the close of business
on the preceding working day. Sub-section (1) of section 25 provides as
513
514
under :
Reserve Bank of India to the effect that it did not consent to the Reserve
Bank of India producing the said returns and that it had claimed and claims
privilege in connection with the production, disclosure and furnishing of the
said returns.
BE
AI
3. Notice of this application was given to the State Bank of India. The
State Bank of India has resisted this application contending that the returns
submitted by the State Bank of India to the Reserve Bank of India under
sections 25 and 27 of the Banking Companies Act are the documents of the
State Bank of India and that they were confidential in nature. The State Bank
of India has further claimed that the production and disclosure of such returns
would involve disclosure of information relating to reserves not shown as
such in the State Banks and its predecessors published Balance Sheets
and particulars not shown in the State Banks and its predecessors Balance
Sheets in respect of provisions made for bad and doubtful debts and other
usual or necessary provisions by the bank. It is further stated that if the said
returns were compared with the published balance sheets of the State Bank
of India and its predecessors, it would disclose information relating to reserves
not shown as such in the State Banks and its predecessors published balance
sheets and particulars not shown in the State Banks and its predecessors
balance sheets in respect of provisions made for bad and doubtful debts and
other usual or necessary provisions made by the Bank. On behalf of the
State Bank of India privilege was claimed from production and disclosure of
the said returns, whether through the hands of the Reserve Bank of India or
otherwise. It is further stated that the State Bank of India was writing to the
515
BE
7. Strong reliance has been placed on behalf of the State Bank of India
on the provisions contained in section 28 of the Banking Companies Act,
1949. That section provides that the Reserve Bank, if it considers it in the
public interest so to do, may publish any information obtained by it under the
Banking Companies Act in such consolidated form as it thinks fit. Under the
Banking Companies Act itself, having regard to the provisions contained in
section 29 of that Act and form B in Schedule III, it is open to a bank not to
show in its profit and loss account any provisions made during the year for
bad and doubtful debts and other usual or necessary provisions. When returns
are filed under sections 25 and 27 of the Act, which would lead to the disclosure
of any reserves not shown as such in the published balance sheet or any
particulars not shown therein in respect of provisions made for bad and doubtful
debts and other usual or necessary provisions, the legislature has provided
the necessary safeguards by section 28. The Reserve Bank is given liberty
to publish information so obtained only in the manner set out in the said
section 28, viz. in such consolidated form as it thought fit, and that too if the
Reserve Bank considered it in the public interest so to do. This section
postulates that information so derived could only be published in a
consolidated form in the interest of the public. If follows therefrom that the
Reserve Bank is not at liberty to publish such information obtained by it in
any other form and except in the public interest. The information so furnished
is information of a confidential nature.The production of the returns by the
Reserve Bank would be contrary to the intendment of the Act.In my view the
petitioners are not entitled to have the said documents produced by the
Reserve Bank of India.
Evidence Act. He contends that under the provisions of section 162 of the
Indian Evidence Act, a witness summoned to produce a document is bound,
if it is in his possession or power, to bring it to Court, notwithstanding any
objection which there may be to its production or to its admissibility and that
the validity of any such objection is then to be decided on by the Court. It is
not necessary for the purpose of the present application to determine whether
a Tribunal is a Court within the meaning of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872.
Section 162 applies after a witness is summoned to produce a document, it
is then the duty of the witness to produce it in Court, even though that witness
may have an objection to its production or to its admissibility. I am at present
considering the question before the issue of a summons to the Reserve Bank
of India to produce the returns. That section has no application to the facts of
the present case. Before issuing a summons to a witness to produce any
document, I have to consider whether I should in the exercise of my power
issue such a summons to the witness or not. Having regard to the facts and
circumstances of the case, I do not consider it either just or proper to issue
a summons to the Reserve Bank of India to produce the documents mentioned
in the application.
AI
KANTILAL T. DESAI,
Presiding Officer,
National Industrial Tribunal
(Bank Disputes), Bombay
518
PRESENT:
APPENDIX G
BEFORE THE NATIONAL INDUSTRIAL TRIBUNAL (BANK DISPUTES)
AT BOMBAY
Applicant
BE
versus
The Banking Companies and Corporations specified in
Schedule No. I to the Order No. S.O. 705, dated the
21st March 1960 and in the Schedule to the Order,
dated 4th June 1960 of the Government of India in the
Ministry of Labour and Employment, New Delhi
Opponents
Applicant
versus
The Bank of Baroda Ltd., and other Banking Companies and
Corporations covered by the Reference ...
Opponents
AI
Applicant
versus
The Indian Overseas Bank Ltd., and Banking Companies and
Corporations covered by the Reference
Opponents
In the matter of Application for furnishing the certificates by the Reserve
Bank of India under Section 34-A of the Banking Companies Act, 1949
519
APPEARANCES:
(1) Shri C. L. Dudhia, Advocate, for the applicant in Miscellaneous
Application No. 2 of 1961.
(2) Shri H. K. Sowani, Advocate, for the applicants in Miscellaneous
Application Nos. 3 and 4 of 1961.
(3) Shri K. T. Sule, Advocate, for the All India Bank Employees
Association.
(4) Shri Nagarkatti for the All India State Bank of India Staff Federation.
(5) Shri Jyoti Ghose for the State Bank of India Employees Association.
(Bengal and Delhi Circles).
(6) Shri Ekambaran for the State Bank of India Staff Union, Andhra
Pradesh, Vijayawada, and Madras Circle.
(7) Sarvashree N. V. Phadke and K. H. Bhabha, Councel, instructed
by Sarvashree N. K. Petigara and J. P. Thacker of Messrs. Mulla
and Mulla and Craigie Blunt and Caroe, Solicitors, for the Indian
Banks Association.
(8) Shri R. Setlur, of Messrs. Crawford Boyley & Co., Solicitors, for
the 8 subsidiary banks of the State Bank of India.
(9) Shri P. P. Khambata, Counsel, instructed by Shri R. Setlur of
Messrs. Crawford Bayley & Co., Solicitors, for the State Bank of
India.
(10) Shri D. B. Tilak, Advocate, Supreme Court of India, for the Bharat
Lakshmi Bank Ltd., the Bank of Nagpur Ltd., the Union Bank of
Bijapur and Sholapur Ltd., and the Chaldean Syrian Bank Ltd.
(11) Shri A. S. Asayekar, Advocate, for the Travancore Cochin Bankers
Association.
INDUSTRY : BANKING
Bombay, 20th January 1961.
ORDER
1. The All India Bank Employees Federation has made an application
for the furnishing of certificates by the Reserve Bank of India under section
34-A of the Banking Companies Act, 1949. It is stated in the application that
the same was made without prejudice to the rights and contentions of the
Federation in connection with the validiiy of the Banking Companies
(Amendment) Act, 1960, whereby section 34-A was inserted in the Banking
Companies Act, 1949. It is stated in the application that a question has
arisen in the present proceedings for judging the financial capacity of each
bank to bear any increased financial burden that may be imposed upon it as
a result of the award that may be made and that I should direct the Reserve
Bank of India to furnish to me in respect of each bank specified in the scheduled
520
are the categorisation of Banks and areas for the purposes of the present
adjudication scales of pay, the method of adjustment in the scales of pay
and dearness allowance with particular reference to the question whether
any part of the existing dearness allowance should be absorbed in the basic
pay. The item relating to categorisation of banks is an item in which all the
banks are interested. The banks have in the past been classified in various
categories and different scales of pay have been provided in respect of banks
according to their categorisation in different classes. All the banks falling
within one class have the same scales of pay provided for them. In order to fix
the scales of pay for different classes of Banks, it is necessary to consider
the paying capacity of the banks falling within different classes.
The employees of all the banks falling within one particular class would
be interested in the scales of pay that may be fixed for that class and are
further interested in showing the paying capacity of the banks falling within
that class. They are also interested in the scales of pay in respect of Banks
falling within other classes in so far as such scales of pay may have a bearing
on the fixation of the scales of pay in respect of the class of the banks in
which they are employed. They have a right to make the present application
not merely in respect of the banks of which they are the employees but in
respect of other banks also. In my view, there is no substance in the contention
that the All India Bank Employees Federation is not entitled to maintain the
application in respect of the State Bank of India. In my view, all the applicants
are entitled to maintain their respective applications in connection with the
State Bank of India.
AI
BE
3. The All India Bank Employees Association has contended that the
Reserve Bank is an interested party, that the Reserve Bank is opposed to
any wage increase in connection with its own staff and that of other banks,
that its certificates were likely to be on the lines on which the individual
banks would like to have them, that once the certificates are issued they are
bound to influence this National Tribunal, that the Association intended tp
challenge the validity of Section 34A of the Banking Companies Act at a later
stage and did not want to compromise this issue in any manner and that it
could not support the application. It is not necessary to set out the other
grounds urged by Shri Sule on behalf of the All India Bank Employees
Association. The State Bank of India Staff Union, Andhra Pradesh,
Vijayawada, and the State Bank of India Staff Union, Madras Circle, have
also contented that section 34-A of the Banking Companies Act is invalid in
law, that the Reserve Bank of India is a body deeply baised against the
workmen of the banks and that it was not open to the All India Bank
Employees Federation or any ration or any other Organisation not representing
the workmen of the State Bank of India to ask for such a certification in
relation to the State Bank of India. They have submitted that I should not
refer the question at least so far as the State Bank of India is concerned to
the Reserve bank, Shri Ghose for the State Bank of India Employees'
Association (Bangel and Delhi Circles) opposed the application Inter alia on
the grounds that the Reserve Bank was biased.
4. I have already held in Miscellaneous Application No. 10 of I960 and
other Miscellaneous Applications by my order dated on 31st October I960
that Section 34A does not violate the fundamental rights guaranteed under
Article 14 of the Constitution of India and that it is valid.
5. By the order of Reference dated 21st March 1960 the Central
Government has referred the disputes in respect of matters specified in the
Second Schedule thereto for adjudication. Among the matters so referred
521
6. The question of the paying capacity of banks has been in issue before
me. All the banks except the Exchange Banks have pleaded their inability to
meet the demands of the workmen as made and it is necessary for me to
determine the paying capacity of the banks in connection with any financial
burden that may be imposed upon them. A large number of banking companies
have claimed the protection afforded by section 34-A(l) of the Banking
Companies Act, 1949. As a question has arisen as to whether any amount
out of the reserves or provisions referred to in sub-section(1) of Section 34A
should be taken into account by me in considering the financial capacity of
the banks concerned to bear any increased burden that may be imposed
upon them by reason of the award that I might make, I refer that question to
the Reserve Bank of India in exercise of the powers conferred on me under
sub-section (2) of Section 34A of the Banking Companies Act in connection
with the 62 banks mentioned in the annexure to the aforesaid applications.The
Reserve Bank should, after taking into consideration the principles of sound
banking and all relevant circumstances concerning the aforesaid banking
companies furnish to me a certificate in respect of each of the aforesaid
banks as provided by sec. 34A(2) stating whether I should not take into
account any amount as such reserved and provisions of the banking company
522
concerned or may take them into account specifying the extent of the amount
to which only I may so take them into account. A list of the Banks in respect
where of the aforesaid certificates are required is hereto annexed and marked
A.
7. I am informed on behalf of the Reserve Bank of India that it will take
about two months time to furnish the requisite certificates.
BE
ANNEXURE A.
Allahabad Bank Limited.
Ambat Bank Limited.
Bank of Baroda Limited.
Bank of India Limited.
Bank of Behar Limited.
Bank of Maharashtra Limited.
Bank of Rajasthan Limited.
Bharatha Lakshmi Bank Limited.
Canara Bank Limited.
Canara Banking Corporation Limited.
Canara Industrial and Banking Syndicate Limited.
Catholic Syrian Bank Limited.
Central Bank of India Ltd.
Chaldean Syrian Bank Limited.
Cochin Commercial Bank Limited.
Devkaran Nanjee Banking Company Limited.
Gadodia Bank Limited.
Hindustan Commercial Bank Limited.
Hindustan Mercantile Bank Limited.
Indian Bank Limited.
Indian Insurance and Banking Corporation Limited.
Indian Overseas Bank Limited.
Jaya Laxmi Bank Limited.
Jodhpur Commercial Bank Limited.
Karnataka Bank Limited.
Lakshmi Commercial Bank Limited.
Narang Bank of India Limited.
National Bank of Lahore Limited.
Nedungadi Bank Limited.
New Bank of India Limited.
Oriental Bank of Commerce Limited.
Pandyan Bank Limited.
AI
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17
18.
19
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
523
KANTILAL T. DESAI,
Presiding Officer,
National Industrial Tribunal
(Bank Disputes),
Bombay-1.
33.
34.
35.
36.
37.
38.
39.
40.
41.
42.
43.
44.
45.
46.
47.
48.
49.
50.
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53.
54.
55.
56.
57.
58.
59.
60.
61.
[No. 56 (6)/62-LRIV],
P. M. MENON ,Secy.
524