@JUDGMENTTAG-ORDER
Dr. T.N. Singh, J.
The common point of law involved in these two cases, which are heard together and are being disposed of by common judgment, vocalises a
single grievance based on infraction of the statutory right inscribed in Section 25F of the Industrial Disputes Act (for short ''the Act'').
State Counsel, Shri Qureshi, has laboured hard to convince me that the petitioners are not entitled to invoke this Court''s writ jurisdiction because
the alternative remedy available to them under the Act has not been exploited or exhausted. Counsel has placed reliance on a Bench decision of
this Court in Paras Kumar (1984 MPWN 436) wherein it was held that the petitioners having remedy of the Civil suit provided to them u/s 8 of the
Public Trust Act, exercise of writ jurisdiction could not be invoked by them. Because the Apex Court in its recent decision in Ram and Shyam
Company Vs. State of Haryana and Others, has stated the law authoritatively dealing with the same contention it behoves me to refer thereto
immediately as law stated by their Lordship, in virtue of the constitutional mandate of Article 141, is binding on me and all courts and authorities in
India, as the law of the land. Their Lordships held that ""the rule which requires the exhaustion of alternative remedies is a rule of convenience and
discretion rather than rule of law."" It was held that the rule does not oust the jurisdiction of the Court to entertain complaints of violation of any
constitutional right if the facts and circumstances of the case so warrant. Indeed, as has been pointed out by their Lordships, the rule does not
merely speak of an ""alternative remedy"", the remedy contemplated must as well be effective and adequate in all respects if the rule has to be
invoked in any case.
I have no doubt that in the instant case the petitioner, who served the State on daily wages, in one case for a period of over 3 1/2 years, and in
another case for over 1 1/2 years, and who came to suffer eventually total loss of service, do not deserve to be pushed to the corridors of Labour
Courts and Tribunals to come eventually to this Court after fighting longdrawn battles in those courts to claim eventually, if necessary, the same
relief by writs of certiorari though they can to day claim in this Court writs of mandamus by directly assailing the orders passed against them
terminating their services illegally in violation of Section 25-F aforesaid. Indeed, my attention is rightly drawn by Shri Upadhyaya, learned counsel
appearing for the petitioners, to the decision in L. Hobert D''Souza (AIR 1982 SC. 854) to submit that the Apex Court did consider the grievance
which the petitioners in those cases had made in the High Court on the writ side and granted them relief which the Court had refused to them
holding that noncompliance with the requirement of Section 25F was fatal and termination of their services was illegal.
I may now proceed to test the validity of the petitioners'' grievance in each case in the context of the factual set-up of the cases. In the first case, in
Misc. Petition No. 64/84, the petitioner Ishwari Prasad was given work on daily wages in the Irrigation Department, albeit in Survey and
Investigation section, of the Government of Madhya Pradesh. This appears clear from the Annexures P-1 to P-9. As per statement made in para 6
of the writ-petition he served for a total period of 580 days pursuant to the aforesaid orders, between 24-3-1980 and 2-9-1983. It is true that the
State has cleverly contrived to ensure a break in service in case of the petitioner by appointing him for short periods under the several orders
aforesaid so as to break the continuity in service of the petitioner. On 3-12-1983 the petitioner was told vide Annexure P-10 that the work in the
Shivpuri Division of the Irrigation Department in Survey and Investigation section was over and as such his services were retrospectively
terminated w.e.f. 29-11-1983. This, counsel submits, was not a mere violation of Section 25F of the Act but a direct effort to the statutory
mandate which not only prohibited a retrospective termination of services but required that in case of a ""retrenchment"" the workmen shall be given
one month''s notice in writing indicating the reasons of retrenchment and, in the alternative, in lieu of such notice he shall be paid wages for the
period of notice. It is true, that the proviso to clause (a) of Section 25F contemplates that such a notice shall not be necessary if the retrenchment
was under an agreement which specifies a date for termination of the service of the concerned workman. In the instant case, however, there is no
scope evidently for the application of the proviso and indeed rightly State has not tried to defend its Order there-under because no such
agreement"" has at all been pleaded or established.
The only point to be decided to give relief to the instant petitioner is whether the Irrigation Department can be considered to be an ""industry"" as
defined in Section 2(j) of the Act. But the recent decision of the Apex Court in M.P. Irrigation Karamchari Sangh Vs. State of M.P. and Another,
, which has upheld this Court''s decision reported in 1971 MPLJ 949, renders it unnecessary to examine the matter further. A Division Bench of
this court in the decision reported in M.P.L.J. took the view that Irrigation Department of the State of Madhya Pradesh constituted ""industry"" as
the activities of the department conformed to the test prescribed by the Apex Court in The State of Bombay and Others Vs. The Hospital
Mazdoor Sabha and Others, . In this connection my attention is also drawn to the celebrated decision of Banglore Water Supply (AIR 1978 S.C.
548) wherein the constitution Bench has up-held and buttressed the view which was expressed in Hospital Mazdoor Sabha (supra). Accordingly, I
have no hesitation at all to hold that the violation of the statutory mandate of Section 25F being writ large on Annexure P-10, the said order is not
sustainable in law and has to be struck down.
In so far as the case of the other petitioner Smt. Chandramukhi Agrawal, is concerned, the only difference is that she was employed in Public
Works Department in the office of Survey sub-Division of Lahar division in tile Building and Roads wing of the department. Shri Upadhyaya has
placed implicit reliance on the decision in the case of The Corporation of the City of Nagpur Vs. Its Employees, . Indeed, the view expressed
therein, which was upheld in Banglore Water Supply (supra), supports counsel''s submission that the activities undertaken by the Building and
Roads Wing of the Public Works Department of the State being akin to the activities undertaken by the Corporation, the petitioner is entitled to be
relieved against the injury caused to her by the State by terminating her services arbitrarily in violation of statutory mandate of Section 25F of the
Act. Counsel has drawn my attention to page 688 of the report, wherein the activities of Public Works Dept. of the Corporation are considered, to
submit that construction of roads, drains etc. for convenience of public must be deemed to be such activity as can be treated ""industry"" within the
definition of the term employed in the Act.
Indeed, I have no hesitation to say that counsel''s contention must prevail despite the serious efforts of Shri Qureshi to wriggle out of the difficult
situation relying mainly on the fact that the petitioner had been offered service as a ''Mali'' vide Annexure P-7 and she having refused to accept the
same, it was not open to her to make any grievance based on infraction of Section 25. What, however, cannot be ignored is the background of
petitioner''s service which is pictured vocally in annexure P-8. Indeed, against the order Annexure P-7, which merely states that for her failure to
join duties as a ''Mali'' (Gardener) her appointment was cancelled, she made representation vide annexure P-8 to submit that she had been
regularly and uninterruptedly working as a Lipik (Clerk), from September 1980 to 15th September 1983. At para 2 of the writ-petition also she
has made a categorical averment that she was given ""the duty of Receipt and Despatch and other writing work"" though she was paid daily wages
first at the rate of Rs. 5/- per day, which was later raised to Rs. 8.70 per day w.e.f. 1-4-1983. Because she made an application for regular
appointment to the post of Lower Division Clerk, the State, indeed considering her application, offered her the post of Mali, which she had refused
to accept. In return, neither in para 2 nor in para 3, to which my attention is drawn by Shri Qureshi, I could find even a single whisper that the facts
alleged by the petitioner were not true. The only legal and factual contention made in paras 2 and 3, are, assertion as ""incorrect"", the fact that the
petitioner worked as a clerk from 1-7-80 to 26-10-83 and of the fact that she had been appointed as ""Mazdoor"" on daily wages and she was not
governed by ""Rules and Regulations applicable to Government servants"". No factual basis is laid in the return to rebut or refute petitioner''s
grievance of her illegal ""retrenchment"" in violation of Section 25F.
Accordingly, I have no hesitation to hold that the petitioner, Chandramukhi Agarwal, is also entitled to the relief claimed because her services were
also terminated in gross violation of the provisions of section 25F as she was not served with any notice of ''retrenchment'' contemplated u/s 25F
and indeed no salary in lieu of the notice was paid to her as contemplated thereunder. Indeed, the fact that she suffered a ""retrenchment"" is self-
evident despite what is to be found in Annexure P-7 because of what appears in annexure P-8, as earlier alluded. Indeed, what appears in
paragraphs 2, 3, 4 and 5 of the writ petition having remained uncontroverted, the petitioner cannot be denied relief.
In the result, both petitions succeed and are allowed. The retrenchment of both petitioners are held illegal and void, being violative of the statutory
mandate of Section 25F. They are directed to be reinstated though I make no order as to payment of back wages to them in this petition. The
issue is kept open. Both the petitioners may make representations to the concerned authorities in that behalf and in the event of the same being
rejected it shall be open to them to approach this Court to pray for appropriate relief. There shall be no order as to costs in these petitions.
This order shall govern both Misc. Petition No. 64/84 and Misc. Petition No. 65/84.
Outstanding amount of security be refunded to the petitioners.