The Supreme Court on Wednesday made it clear that it will proceed to
examine, on merits, the long-pending reference concerning the correctness of
the 1978 ruling in Bangalore Water Supply & Sewerage Board v. R Rajappa.
The court said “industry” has to be given a wide interpretation
under the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947.
A nine-judge Bench led by Chief Justice of India Surya Kant, and
comprising Justices BV Nagarathna, PS Narasimha, Dipankar Datta, Ujjal Bhuyan,
Satish Chandra Sharma, Joymalya Bagchi, Alok Aradhe, and Vipul M Pancholi,
declined to entertain objections to the very maintainability of the reference.
The issue had been raised in light of the repeal of the 1947 law
and its replacement by the Industrial Relations Code, 2020. The Bench indicated
that leaving the reference unanswered could have continuing consequences,
particularly for pending matters where the earlier precedent may still govern
interpretation.
The
Chief Justice underscored that the Court would not sidestep the substantive
questions merely because the statutory framework has since evolved. Even if
only a limited set of legacy disputes remain, the precedent would continue to
influence adjudication unless conclusively addressed, he observed.
Senior Advocate Indira Jaising, defending the 1978 ruling,
argued that the reference itself was flawed and unnecessary. She maintained
that there was no real conflict between earlier judgments that warranted
reconsideration and cautioned that any ruling by the present Bench would have
wide ramifications, affecting both labour and management.
According to her, the earlier decision required no revisiting
and the Court should decline to reopen settled law. At the same time, she
indicated that she would advance submissions on merits if the Bench chose to
proceed.
Rejecting the invitation to scrutinise the validity of the
reference, the Bench said it would directly engage with the substantive issues
surrounding the correctness of the earlier judgment. It clarified that the
exercise would be confined to interpreting the definition of “industry” as it
existed under the 1947 Act, without examining the contours or validity of the
2020 Code.
Justice Joymalya Bagchi noted that the 1978 ruling had, in a
sense, anticipated legislative intervention to address gaps in the statutory
framework. While Parliament has since acted, he emphasised that the present
inquiry is limited to assessing whether the earlier interpretation was sound in
the context of the law then in force. He added that the Court could expressly
clarify that its conclusions would not bear upon the interpretation or
constitutionality of the new legislation.
During the hearing, Justice Dipankar Datta flagged the need to
interpret the definition of “industry” in conjunction with the concept of an
“industrial dispute”, observing that the statutory scheme cannot be understood
in isolation.
Appearing for the State of Karnataka, Senior Advocate Sanjay
Hegde argued for a more restrained approach, contending that the wide
interpretation adopted in 1978 stretched the statutory language beyond reasonable
limits. He urged a return to an earlier line of reasoning that linked
“industry” more closely to commercial or business-like activities, stressing
that statutory terms cannot be extended indefinitely.
The Bench also engaged with the scope of “sovereign functions”,
with questions raised about how core governmental functions, statutory duties,
and welfare activities should be treated within the framework of “industry”.
Hegde submitted that the traditional understanding of sovereign functions is
too narrow and must account for the expanded role of the modern State in
regulation and planning.
Senior Advocate Shadan Farasat, for Punjab, similarly pressed
for narrowing the definition, suggesting that it should be anchored in
activities involving production or manual labour. He argued that extending the
concept to professional or intellectual services risks detaching it from its
historical roots in industrial relations.
Other counsel echoed concerns about overbreadth.
Senior Advocate Jaideep Gupta pointed to the incongruity of
applying industrial law frameworks to religious institutions, while Senior
Advocate Abhimanyu Bhandari called for a broader reading of sovereign functions
to include welfare activities.
On the other side, Jaising warned that scaling back the
definition could exclude large sections of workers from statutory protection,
leaving them without effective remedies unless covered by alternative legal
regimes.
The hearing, which began earlier this week, will continue on
Thursday.