Employees State Insurance Corporation Vs. S.K. Aggarwal & Ors.
(From the Judgment and Order dated 20.1.84 of the Calcutta High Court in Crl. R. No. 1271 of 1982)
(From the Judgment and Order dated 20.1.84 of the Calcutta High Court in Crl. R. No. 1271 of 1982)
Ms. Manjeet Chawla, Advocate for the Respondents.
Employees State Insurance Act, 1948
Section 40, 2(17), 2(15) read with Indian Penal Code, 1860 – Section 405, Exp. 2 and 406 “Principal Employer” – Who is – Case of Public Limited Company – Phrase, “being an employer” in Sec-tion 405, Exp. 2 – Meaning – Directors, if employer Held that in the case of a public limited company, it is the company itself who is principal employer and Directors of the company are not covered by this definition : ESIC, Chandigarh v. Gurdial Singh (1991 (24) Lab & IC 52) Relied upon and followed. (Paras 8 & 9)
CRIMINAL LAW
Indian Penal Code, 1860
Section 405 Exp.2 and 406 “Employer” – Who is – Directors of public limited company – If “employer” for purposes of ESI Act, 1948 and liable for Prosecution for mis appropriation of em-ployees fund as not deposited in time – Held that Directors are not “employer” as in case of public limited company, the company itself is “principal employer” under the Act of 1948. Even other-wise, that definition cannot be applied to Exp. 2 of Section 405. (Paras 9 & 10)
2. Employees’ State Insurance Corporation, Indore v. Kai-lashchandra and Ors. (1989 (22) Labour and Industrial Cases 760) (Para 7) Referred in JT 1998 (5) SC 233
3. Suresh Tulsidas Kilachand and ors. etc. v. Collector of Bombay and ors. etc. (1984 (17) Labour and Industrial Cases 1614) (Para 5) Referred in JT 1998 (5) SC 233
1. The respondents were, at the material time, directors of a company M/s. Indo Japan Steel Ltd. The company has a factory and head office at Calcutta. Under the provisions of Section 40 of the Employees State Insurance Act, 1948, the “principal employer” is required to pay, in respect of every employee, whether direct-ly employed by him or by through an immediate employer, both the employer’s contribution and the employee’s contribution. Under sub-section (2) of Section 40 the principal employer, in the case of an employee directly employed by him, is entitled to recover from the employee the employee’s contribution by deduction from his wages. Under sub-section (4) any sum deducted by the princi-pal employer from wages under this Act shall be deemed to have been entrusted to him by the employee for the purpose of paying the contribution in respect of which it was deducted. The com-plainant who is the appellant before us inspected the head office of the company and found that the company had deducted a sum of Rs. 2,223.50 as employees share of contribution from their wages during the period February 1981 to September 1981. The employer, however, had failed to deposit the said amount in the Employees’ State Insurance Fund within the specified time.
2. Thereupon the appellant lodged a complaint against the respondents of criminal breach of trust under Section 405 Expla-nation 2 of the Indian Penal Code read with Section 406 of the Indian Penal Code. On the basis of this complaint the learned Magistrate took cognizance and issued summons against the re-spondents to stand trial. The learned Magistrate also issued a search warrant for seizure of certain records of the company as prayed for by the complainant. Aggrieved thereby, the respondents filed an application under Section 401/482 of the Criminal Proce-dure Code for quashing the proceedings in the said case. The High Court by its impugned judgment has quashed the proceedings on the ground that the respondents cannot be considered as ’employers’ within the meaning of Explanation 2 to Section 405 read with Section 406 of the Indian Penal Code. Hence they were not liable for prosecution under Section 406. From this judgment the present appeal has been filed by the original complainant.
Section 405 Explanation 2 is as follows :-
“405 : Criminal breach of trust : Whoever, being in any manner entrusted with property, or with any dominion over property, dishonestly misappropriates or converts to his own use that property, or dishonestly uses or disposes of that property in violation of any direction of law prescribing the mode in which such trust is to be discharged, or of any legal contract, express or implied, which he has made touching the discharge of such trust, or wilfully suffers any other person so to do, commits “criminal breach of trust”.
Explanation 1 : …………………………..
Explanation 2 : A person, being an employer, who deducts the employees’ contribution from the wages payable to the em-ployee for credit to the Employees’ State Insurance Fund held and administered by the Employees State Insurance Act, 1948, shall be deemed to have been entrusted with the amount of the contribution so deducted by him and if he makes default in the payment of such contribution to the said Fund in viola-tion of the said Act, shall be deemed to have dishonestly used the amount of the said contribution in violation of a direction of law as aforesaid.”
Explanation 2 was inserted by the Employees’ State Insurance Amendment Act 38 of 1975. Explanation 2 makes “a person being an employer” who deducts the employee’s contribution from the wages payable to the employee liable for criminal breach of trust if he commits a default in the payment of such contribution to the Employees’ State Insurance Fund. Under Section 11 of the Indian Penal Code the word “person” includes any company or association or body of person whether incorporated or not. The High Court has held that the term “a person being an employer” in Explanation 2 to Section 405 of the Indian Penal Code can refer only to the company who had employed the employees in question. The direc-tors of that company could not be considered as employers under Explanation 2 to Section 405 of the Indian Penal Code. The com-plainant, however, contends that Explanation 2 to Section 405 of the Indian Penal Code should be read in the light of the Em-ployees’ State Insurance Act, 1948. Under Section 40 of the Employees’ State Insurance Act the obligation to pay contribution in the Employees’ State Insurance Fund has been cast on the principal employer. The relevant provisions of Section 40 are as follows :-
“40 : Principal employer to pay contributions in the first instance :
(1) The principal employer shall pay in respect of every em-ployee, whether directly employed by him or by through an immediate employer, both the employer’s contribution and the employee’s contribution.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in any other enactment but subject to the provisions of this Act and the regulations, if any, made thereunder, the principal employer shall, in the case of an employee directly employed by him (not being an exempted employee), be entitled to recover from the employee the employees’ contribution by deduction from his wages and not otherwise :
Provided that no such deduction shall be made from any wages other than such as relate to the period or part of the period in respect of which the contribution is payable, or in excess of the sum representing the employees’ contribution for the period.
(3) ………………
(4) Any sum deducted by the principal employer from wages under this Act shall be deemed to have been entrusted to him by the employee for the purpose of paying the contribution in respect of which it was deducted.
(5) ………………”
The term “principal employer” has been defined in Section 2 (17) of the Employees’ State Insurance Act, 1948 as follows :-
“2(17) : “principal employer” means :-
(i) in a factory, the owner or occupier of the factory includes the managing agent of such owner or occupier, the legal repre-sentative of a deceased owner or occupier, and where a person has been named as the manager of (the factory under Factories Act, 1948) (63 of 1948) ; the person so named :
(ii) ………………..
(iii) in any other establishment, any person responsible for the supervision and control of the establishment.”
Section 2 (17) defines the “principal employer” in a factory as the owner or occupier of the factory. “Occupier” of a factory is defined in Section 2(15) as having the same meaning assigned to it in the Factories Act, 1948. Section 2(n) of the Factories Act, 1948 as it stood at the relevant time, defined an “Occupier” to mean the person who has ultimate control over the affairs of the factory. Section 100 of the Factories Act dealt with the determi-nation of occupier in certain cases. Under sub-section (2) where the occupier was a company, any directors thereof could be prose-cuted and punished for any offence for which the occupier was liable.
3. Section 2(17) of the Employees’ State Insurance Act, howev-er, defines the principal employer as either owner or occupier – taking care of all eventualities. When the owner of the factory is the principal employer, there is no need to examine who is occupier. The owner will be the principal employer under Section 40.
4. The Employees’ State Insurance Act does not define the term “employer” although under Sections 85B and 85C of that Act the term “employer” is used.
5. The provisions of Section 40 in the light of these defini-tions have been considered by various High Courts in order to decide whether a director of a limited company can be considered as the principal employer liable to pay contribution under Sec-tion 40. A Division Bench of the Bombay High Court in the case Suresh Tulsidas Kilachand and ors. etc. v. Collector of Bombay and ors. etc. (1984 (17) Labour and Industrial Cases 1614) held that a director of a company by virtue of being a director is not principal employer contemplated by Section 2(17) of the Em-ployees’ State Insurance Act. He is not personally liable to pay employer’s contribution under the Act. In the context of Section 2(17) read with Section 2(15) the Court held that whether a person is occupier or not has to be ascertained with reference to whether he is in ultimate control over the factory. When the definition of principal employer in Section 2(17) refers to the “owner” or “occupier” of a factory, the principal employer can be either the owner or the occupier depending upon the facts of each case. When there is an owner of the factory that owner must be considered as the principal employer liable for contribution.
6. Under Section 40 the words “owner” and “occupier” have been used disjunctively. The Court also referred to Section 100 of the Factories Act and said that even under the Factories Act, 1948, the Legislature has clearly contemplated that in the case of a factory, a company can be the “occupier”. Therefore, when the owner of a factory is a company it is the company which is the principal employer and not its director. The Bombay High Court overruled the judgment of the Single Judge of the Bombay High Court in so deciding.
7. The same view has been taken by the Madhya Pradesh High Court in the case of Employees’ State Insurance Corporation, Indore v. Kailashchandra and Ors. (1989 (22) Labour and Industri-al Cases 760). The Madhya Pradesh High Court also said that when there is a default in payment of contribution by the company, the managing director, or other directors cannot be made personally liable. The contribution can be recovered from the company as the principal employer.
8. In the case of Employees’ State Insurance Corporation, Chandigarh v. Gurdial Singh and Ors. (1991 (24) Labour and Indus-trial cases 52), this Court held that the directors of a private limited company were not personally liable to pay contributions under the Employees’ State Insurance Act, 1948. The Court was considering a case where a private limited company was the owner of the factory and the occupier of the factory had been duly named under the Factories Act, 1948. The Court said that the directors did not come within the definition of clause 1 of Section 2(17) of the Employees’ State Insurance Act. This Court also disapproved of the decision of a Single Judge of the Bombay High Court which has been subsequently overruled by the Division Bench of the Bombay High Court in the case of Suresh Tulsidas Kilachand and Ors. etc. v. Collector of Bombay and Ors. etc. (Supra).
9. Therefore, even if we read the definition of “principal employer” under the Employees’ State Insurance Act, 1948 in Explanation 2 to Section 405 of the Indian Penal Code, the direc-tors of the company, in the present case, would not be covered by the definition of “principal employer” when the company itself owns the factory and is also the employer of its employees at the head office.
10. In any event, in the absence of any express provision in the Indian Penal Code incorporating the definition of “principal employer” in Explanation 2 to Section 405, this definition cannot be held to apply to the term “employer” in Explanation 2. As the High Court has observed, the term “employer” in Explanation 2 must be understood as in ordinary parlance. In ordinary parlance it is the company which is the employer and not its directors either singly or collectively.
11. In the premises we do not see any reason to interfere with the impugned judgment of the Calcutta High Court. The appeal is, therefore, dismissed.