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Labour Laws




                    Notes            for maintenance of the factories and the safety measures therein. The fear of penalty and
                                     punishment is bound to make the board of directors of the company more vigilant and
                                     responsive to the need to carry out various obligations and duties under the Act, particularly
                                     in regard to the safety and welfare of the workers.
                                     Proviso (ii) was introduced by the Amending Act couched in a mandatory form - “any one
                                     of the directors shall be deemed to be the occupier” - keeping in view the experience gained
                                     over the years as to how the directors of a company managed to escape their liability for
                                     various breaches and defaults committed in the factory by putting up another employee
                                     as a shield and nominating him as the ‘occupier’ who would willingly suffer penalty and
                                     punishment.
                                     It was held that where the company owns or runs a factory, it is the company which is
                                     in the ultimate control of the affairs of the factory through its directors. Even where the
                                     resolution of the board says that an officer or employee other than one of the directors shall
                                     have ultimate control over the affairs of the factory, it would only be a camouflage or an
                                     artful circumvention because the ultimate control cannot be transferred from that of the
                                     company to one of its employees or officers, except where there is a complete transfer of
                                     the control of the affairs of the factory.
                                     An occupier of the factory in the case of a company must necessarily be any of its directors
                                     who shall be so notified for the purposes of the Factories Act. Such an occupier cannot
                                     be any other employee of the company or the factory. This interpretation of an ‘occupier’
                                     would apply to all provisions of the Act wherever the expression `occupier’ is used, and
                                     not merely for the purposes of Sec. 7 or Sec. 7A of the Act.
                                     The Supreme Court further held that proviso (ii) is not ultravires the main provision of Sec.
                                     2(n) and, as a matter of fact, there is no conflict at all between the main provision of Sec.
                                     2(n) and proviso (ii) thereto. Both can be read harmoniously and when so read in the case
                                     of a company, the occupier of a factory owned by a company would mean any one of the
                                     directors of the company who has been notified/identified by the company to have ultimate
                                     control over the affairs of the factory. And where no such director has been identified, then,
                                     for the purposes of prosecution and punishment under the Act, the Inspector of Factories
                                     may initiate proceedings against anyone of the directors as the deemed occupier.

                                     The Supreme Court further held that there is nothing unreasonable in fixing the liability on
                                     a director of a company and making him responsible for compliance with the provisions
                                     of the Act and the rules made thereunder and laying down that if there is contravention
                                     under of the provisions of the Act or an offence is committed under the Act the notified
                                     director and, in the absence of the notification, anyone of the directors of the company shall
                                     be prosecuted and shall be liable to be punished as the deemed occupier.
                                     The restriction imposed by proviso (ii), if at all it may be called a restriction, has a direct
                                     nexus with the object sought to be achieved and is, therefore, a reasonable restriction within
                                     the meaning of clause (6) of Article 19. Proviso (ii) to Sec. 2 (n) is thus not ultravires Article
                                     19(1)(g) of the Constitution.
                                     Questions:
                                     1.   Study and analyze the case.
                                     2.   Write down the case facts.

                                     3.   What do you infer from it?
                                   Source: http://www.thehindubusinessline.in/2000/01/10/stories/211001ak.htm








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