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  1. Home/
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  3. High Court Of Karnatak/
  4. 2024/
  5. February

Sri Kumar H M vs. Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation

Decided on 29 February 2024• Citation: WA/1365/2023• High Court of Karnatak
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                                         - 1 -                                    
                                                   NC: 2024:KHC:8788-DB           
                                                   WA No. 1365 of 2023            
                   IN THE HIGH COURT OF KARNATAKA   AT BENGALURU                  
                                       TH                                         
                      DATED THIS THE 29  DAY OF FEBRUARY,  2024                   
                                      PRESENT                                     
                     THE HON'BLE  MR N. V. ANJARIA, CHIEF JUSTICE                 
                                        AND                                       
                 THE HON'BLE MR  JUSTICE T.G. SHIVASHANKARE  GOWDA                
                        WRIT APPEAL NO. 1365 OF 2023 (S-KSRTC)                    
                BETWEEN:                                                          
                1. SRI KUMAR H M                                                  
                   S/O MUDDEGOWDA                                                 
                   AGED  ABOUT 59 YEARS                                           
                                      TH                                          
                   CONDUCTOR,  KSRTC 5  DEPOT                                     
                   BHEL NEAR, MYSORE ROAD                                         
                   BENGALURU  – 560 026                                           
                                                          …APPELLANT              
                (BY SRI. SOMASHEKHARAIAH R P, ADVOCATE)                           
                AND:                                                              
                1. KARNATAKA  STATE ROAD                                          
 Digitally signed                                                                 
                   TRANSPORT  CORPORATION                                         
 by AMBIKA H B                                                                    
                   MYSORE  URBAN DISTRICT                                         
 Location: HIGH                                                                   
                   MYSORE  BY ITS                                                 
 COURT  OF                                                                        
                   DIVISIONAL CONTROLLER                                          
 KARNATAKA                                                                        
                   REPRESENTED  BY ITS                                            
                   CHIEF LAW OFFICER                                              
                   MYSORE  – 570 001                                              
                                                        …RESPONDENT               
                     THIS WRIT APPEAL IS FILED UNDER SECTION 4 OF THE             
                KARNATAKA  HIGH COURT  ACT PRAYING  TO SET  ASIDE THE             
                ORDER DATED 14.09.2023 MADE IN WP No.43430/2019 PASSED BY         
                THE LEARNED SINGLE JUDGE.                                         
                     THIS APPEAL, COMING ON FOR  PRELIMINARY HEARING,             
                THIS DAY, CHIEF JUSTICE DELIVERED THE FOLLOWING:                  

                                         - 2 -                                    
                                                   NC: 2024:KHC:8788-DB           
                                                   WA No. 1365 of 2023            
                                     JUDGMENT                                     
                    Heard learned advocate Mr.R.P.Somashekharaiah for the         
                appellant.                                                        
                    2.   The challenge in this writ appeal is directed against    
                judgment and order dated 14.09.2023 of learned Single Judge,      
                whereby learned Single Judge set aside the judgment and award     
                dated 24.11.2018 passed by the Industrial Tribunal, Mysuru in     
                Reference No.1 of 2017.                                           
                    2.1  The Industrial Tribunal had allowed the said reference   
                and set aside the order of punishment passed against the          
                appellant – workman. The punishment imposed on the appellant      
                was reduction of three incremental stages of basic pay with       
                permanent effect and further to treat the suspension period of    
                workman as no duty period.                                        
                    3. Noticing the facts in the background, the appellant was a  
                conductor working under the respondent – Karnataka State Road     
                Transport Corporation. While on duty on 11.01.2010, in a bus      
                plying between Mysuru City bus stand to Bannur, it was found by   
                the checking squad, when the bus was inspected, that the          

                                         - 3 -                                    
                                                   NC: 2024:KHC:8788-DB           
                                                   WA No. 1365 of 2023            
                appellant had not issued tickets to a group of eighteen passengers
                traveling from Cauvery Bridge to Bannur. The appellant –          
                conductor failed to collect the fare of Rs.3/- to be charged from 
                each of the passengers. At that time there were, in all, thirty   
                passengers traveling in the bus.                                  
                    3.1  For  the  aforesaid misconduct and charge, a             
                departmental enquiry was conducted against the workman. Finally,  
                the punishment, as above, was imposed by order dated 30.11.2010   
                by the Disciplinary Authority. Challenging the punishment         
                imposed, the appellant approached the Industrial Tribunal at      
                Mysuru. The Reference was allowed, resulting into filing of writ  
                petition by the Corporation.                                      
                    3.2  In the writ petition, it was contended that the Tribunal 
                was not justified in setting aside the punishment and that the    
                reference itself could not have been entertained for the reason that
                there was a delay of more than six years on the part of workman in
                approaching the Tribunal.                                         
                    4. Learned Single Judge accepted the contention of the        
                Corporation on the score of delay. Learned Single Judge was of    

                                         - 4 -                                    
                                                   NC: 2024:KHC:8788-DB           
                                                   WA No. 1365 of 2023            
                the view that the reasoning supplied by the Tribunal that the delay
                would not come in the way of the workman in challenging the       
                punishment order and that no prejudice would be caused to the     
                Corporation, was not justified.                                   
                    5.   It is trite principle that a litigant should approach the
                court with vigilance and without unreasonable delay. This         
                proposition applies with equal force to industrial disputes. It is well
                settled that any industrial dispute to be adjudicated should be of the
                kind which could be considered as an “existing dispute”. A dispute
                which has become stale may not be entertained. Even on general    
                principle, the right to relief would be lost when there is        
                unreasonable and unexplained delay in approaching the court of    
                law.                                                              
                    5.1  In  Prabhakar  vs. Joint Director, Sericulture           
                Department and another [(2015) 15 SCC 1], the Supreme Court,      
                while considering the case where workman raises dispute belatedly 
                and the delay or laches remain unexplained, observed that in such 
                eventuality it would be presumed that the workman has waived his  
                right or has acquiesced. In that case, the challenge was to the   

                                         - 5 -                                    
                                                   NC: 2024:KHC:8788-DB           
                                                   WA No. 1365 of 2023            
                order of termination by the employer. It was observed that        
                although no limitation is prescribed under the Industrial Disputes
                Act, 1947 for making reference under Section 10(1) of the Act, the
                words “at any time” do not admit that the limitation aspect is    
                irrelevant and not applicable in respect of the proceedings to be 
                taken out under the Act. The Supreme Court observed that the      
                policy of the industrial adjudication is that very stale claims should
                not be encouraged.                                                
                    5.2  Reverting to the facts of the present case, the order of 
                punishment was  passed  in the  year 2010  against the            
                appellant – workman, the appellant approached the Industrial      
                Tribunal in the year 2017. There is a delay of more than six years.
                It was for such long period that the appellant sat tight and did not
                do anything to agitate for his grievance. It could be well said that
                the dispute had become stale.                                     
                    5.3  Learned Single Judge was eminently justified to take a   
                view that the said aspect was overlooked by the Tribunal and on   
                that ground alone, the award of the Tribunal was liable to be set 
                aside. The aspect of six years delay in raising the Reference when

                                         - 6 -                                    
                                                   NC: 2024:KHC:8788-DB           
                                                   WA No. 1365 of 2023            
                weighted with learned Single Judge in setting aside the judgment  
                and award of the Industrial Tribunal and allowing the writ petition, it
                brooked no error in the facts and circumstances of the case.      
                    6. Even as the aforesaid ground is sufficient to uphold the   
                judgment and order of learned Single Judge, since learned         
                advocate for the appellant harped to take the court to the merits of
                the case, the court examined the said aspect also in the course of
                hearing. The Disciplinary Authority while confirming the findings of
                                 inter alia                                       
                the Enquiry Officer      recorded that it was a group of          
                eighteen passengers to whom the appellant failed to issue the     
                tickets. The defence of the workman that the said group was in    
                drunken state, was not liable to be accepted. If that was so, the 
                appellant was under duty to alight the passengers immediately     
                from the bus. The bus was a local bus where the appellant was     
                expected to issue tickets to the passengers without wasting time  
                upon their embarkment into the bus. The penalty amount was        
                recovered from the head of the team of the passengers, the tickets
                were taken into custody from the conductor.                       

                                         - 7 -                                    
                                                   NC: 2024:KHC:8788-DB           
                                                   WA No. 1365 of 2023            
                    6.1  It was rightly observed by the disciplinary authority that
                it was the duty of the conductor to issue tickets to each of the  
                passengers and it was displayed in bold letters “issue tickets and
                go forward” which instructions, the appellant - conductor completely
                disregarded and did not issue tickets to the group of eighteen    
                passengers. The appellant – conductor also signed the charge      
                memo  issued against him agreeing to it. These all were the       
                relevant documents and material part of the record before the     
                Enquiring Authorities on the basis of which the proof of the charges
                was arrived at.                                                   
                    6.2  It was also stated that the appellant was involved in    
                ninety six cases of indiscipline and misconduct in the past and   
                there were two cases which were severe red marked cases.          
                    6.3  For all the foregoing reasons and discussions, even on   
                merits, the punishment imposed on the workman was entirely        
                justified and the Tribunal misdirected itself in setting aside the
                punishment order.                                                 
                    6.4  Thus, viewed either from the aspect of delay of six      
                years in raising the Reference before the Tribunal, or considered 

                                         - 8 -                                    
                                                   NC: 2024:KHC:8788-DB           
                                                   WA No. 1365 of 2023            
                on the aspect of merits, this court finds that the learned Single 
                Judge was entirely right in setting at naught the judgment and    
                award of the Industrial Tribunal which had set aside the          
                punishment order.                                                 
                    7.   The writ appeal stands meritless and it is dismissed.    
                                                  Sd/-                            
                                             CHIEF JUSTICE                        
                                                  Sd/-                            
                                                 JUDGE                            
                AHB                                                               
                List No.: 1 Sl No.: 47